Imperial Valley Press

California slayings suspect yells ‘I am not guilty!’ to jury

-

REDWOOD CITY, Calif. (AP) — A career criminal accused by authoritie­s of raping and killing six women in the 1970s yelled “I am not guilty!” to a jury at the start of his trial Friday for two of the killings.

Rodney Halbower also yelled “I have never raped or murdered in my life!” to the jury in an outburst that briefly disrupted court proceeding­s, led to a request for a mistrial by his lawyer and claims by a prosecutor that the outburst was staged.

The killings happened in 1976 in California’s San Mateo County and in Reno, Nevada, and were dubbed the Gypsy Hill Killings. DNA evidence led to Halbower’s arrest in 2014. He was in prison in Oregon at the time.

Halbower, 69, is now on trial in the 1976 rapes and killings of two high school students within weeks of each other. The Gypsy Hill Killings sent fear through the San Francisco Bay Area when they happened.

Prosecutor­s have said they don’t plan to try Halbower for the other killings because a conviction in the current trial — for which their evidence is strongest — would keep him locked up for life.

After Halbower’s outburst, Judge Mark Forcum denied several motions for a mistrial made by Halbower’s attorney, John Halley.

“He doesn’t get to set up his own mistrial,” said Forcum.

Prosecutor Sean Gallagher said he believed Halbower was purposely seeking a mistrial and vowed to talk over any outbursts that might come during opening statements.

Gallagher told the jury about the two teen girls who were abducted, raped and killed in a once-tranquil suburb, and that DNA from semen found in both women and preserved for decades matched Halbower’s DNA. One of the victims was stabbed to death and the other was beaten in the head with concrete and stabbed in her heart.

Authoritie­s in the 1970s said the killings were linked and dubbed the attacker the Gypsy Hill Killer for the location where one of the first victims was found. Halbower is also suspected of raping and killing a nursing student in Reno during the same period as the five California killings.

“I wasn’t here during that period of time,” Halbower yelled out, interrupti­ng Gallagher’s opening statement.

Gallagher responded that Halbower’s statement wasn’t true because he was living in the nearby city of San Bruno in early 1976.

Halbower’s attorney told the jury that some of the DNA evidence had been mishandled and that should create enough reasonable doubt for the jurors to acquit.

Halbower calmed down and remained quiet in the afternoon.

“I want to note for the record that the defendant stayed silent after opening statements,” Judge Mark Forcum told lawyers after jurors left for the day. “That corroborat­es in my mind that he picks and chooses his spots to interrupt the proceeding­s.”

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States