Las Vegas Review-Journal

Trump’s schedule today

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■ President Donald Trump will deliver a keynote address to the Poles from Krasinski Square, site of a monument commemorat­ing the 1944 Warsaw Uprising against the Nazis.

■ The president has scheduled talks with the leaders of Poland and Croatia and may hold a joint news conference — his first one abroad — with Polish President Andrzej Duda.

■ Trump also is to speak with the heads of a dozen countries bordered by the Baltic, Adriatic and Black seas. Collective­ly known as the Three Seas Initiative, the group aims to expand and modernize energy and trade with a goal of reducing the region’s dependence on Russian energy.

9th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals was largely unrelated to the prior bad acts issue that dominated Petrocelli’s early appeals.

The 9th Circuit instead ruled that the penalty phase of the Wilson murder trial represente­d a “flagrant violation” of Petrocelli’s constituti­onal rights, because it relied on testimony from a psychiatri­st who examined Petrocelli without informing him of his Miranda rights.

The psychiatri­st, Dr. Lynn Gerow, was hired by the prosecutio­n to perform a competency evaluation after Petrocelli was arrested on murder and robbery charges. He visited Petrocelli at the Washoe County jail and conducted an interview — without contacting

PETROCELLI

defense lawyers and without informing Petrocelli of his Fifth Amendment protection against self-incriminat­ion and his Sixth Amendment right to legal representa­tion.

Gerow testified as a government witness during the penalty phase of the Wilson murder trial and told jurors that Petrocelli had a psychopath­ic personalit­y for which “there is no cure.” The jury imposed a sentence of death.

U.S. Circuit Judge William Fletcher wrote in his opinion that “the effect of Dr. Gerow’s testimony was magnified by an erroneous jury instructio­n,” which he said gave jurors an inaccurate warning about the chances of Petrocelli’s release if he was sentenced to life without parole.

The psychiatri­st’s testimony, coupled with the instructio­n, “had a substantia­l and injurious effect on the jury’s decision to impose the death sentence,” Fletcher wrote.

Since the first guilty verdict, Petrocelli, now 65, has been convicted of two other killings that occurred in 1981. One was of Barker, who was killed in October 1981. The other murder, of Dennis Gibson, was not prosecuted until the late 2000s. In that case, Petrocelli pleaded guilty to second-degree murder.

All three of his victims were killed within six months of one another — from October 1981, when he shot Barker, to March 1982, when he killed Wilson. Petrocelli had not been convicted of murdering Barker when he stood trial for the shooting of Wilson, but the jury still learned of her death through testimony at trial.

Case created evidence parameters

Petrocelli’s lawyers argued on appeal that such evidence was unfairly prejudicia­l, citing trial law that generally prohibits evidence of prior bad acts or bad character except under certain circumstan­ces. In a 1985 decision, the Nevada Supreme Court upheld Petrocelli’s conviction but set out a new test for courts to determine what “prior bad acts” can come into evidence at trial.

The state high court’s ruling led to the establishm­ent of what is known as a Petrocelli hearing, at which defense attorneys and prosecutor­s argue over whether the “bad acts” evidence meets the standard spelled out in the 1985 ruling.

“The Petrocelli case has defined the parameters of the admissibil­ity of character evidence in Nevada,” Clark County Deputy Public Defender Jordan Savage said. “The bad character evidence is disfavored because there is the danger that

the prejudicia­l and inflammato­ry impact of that type of character evidence will cause the jury to not fairly consider the evidence of the charges in the current case.”

Petrocelli’s lawyer could not be reached for comment.

Original conviction upheld

The 9th Circuit, in reversing the death sentence, upheld the original

conviction. According to the ruling, state prosecutor­s can hold a new penalty phase trial or impose a lesser sentence consistent with the law.

“We are pleased that the Ninth Circuit has affirmed the District Court’s denial of Petrocelli’s challenges to his conviction­s, and we are in the process of further reviewing the Ninth Circuit’s decision to reverse the District Court’s denial of

relief with respect to his sentence,” said Monica Moaz, a spokeswoma­n for Nevada Attorney General Adam Laxalt, whose office defended the conviction and the death sentence.

Contact Jenny Wilson at jenwilson@reviewjour­nal.com or 702-384-8710. Follow @jennydwils­on on Twitter. Review-journal reporter Ben Botkin contribute­d to this story.

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