New Haven Register (Sunday) (New Haven, CT)

Two cases, no body

Supreme Court decision recalls crime with parallels to Dulos

- By John Nickerson

STAMFORD — The case of April Dawn Pennington bears little resemblanc­e to that of missing New Canaan mother of five Jennifer Dulos. But it does show that the state is capable of successful­ly prosecutin­g murder cases without producing for a jury what is legally referred to as the “corpus delicti” — literally “body of the crime.”

The murder conviction of lobsterman George Leniart, who killed a 15yearold girl 20 years ago in eastern Connecticu­t, was upheld last week by the Connecticu­t Supreme Court.

The court ruled the jury that convicted Leniart in 2010 had been presented with enough evidence to decide Pennington had been murdered, even though no trace of her has been found since she disappeare­d in 1996, 23 years ago. The decision stays a state Appellate Court ruling that called for the case to be remanded for a new trial.

Leniart, now 53, is serving a life sentence without the possibilit­y of parole at the Cheshire Correction­al Institutio­n.

Jennifer Dulos has not been found since she was reported on May 24. Her estranged husband, Fotis Dulos, has pleaded not guilty to tampering with evidence and hindering prosecutio­n charges in connection with his wife’s disappeara­nce.

But one striking parallel to the two “no body” cases is criminal defense attorney Norm Pattis, who is vigorously representi­ng Fotis Dulos, also defended Leniart.

“The Leniart case was a difficult trial and I was hopeful that the Supreme Court would order a new trial,” Pattis said of the court’s latest decision. “Socalled nobody murder cases present unique dangers, giving the state free rein to substitute speculatio­n and belief for proof. In Mr. Leniart’s case, jurors were not permitted to see behind the screen of circumstan­tial evidence. The state fought hard to make halftruths into the whole story. I am surprised the Supreme Court let the state get away with it.”

If the Pennington case demonstrat­es it is possible to convict without a body, it also shows how long prosecutor­s can take to charge someone with murder when that crucial piece of evidence is missing. Although Pennington disappeare­d from her Montville home on May 29, 1996, Leniart was not charged with the murder until 12 years later.

According to witness testimony, Leniart bragged that he would never be charged with murder because no one would ever find the body. “No body, no murder,” he was quoted as saying.

According to testimony in Leniart’s trial, Pennington snuck out of her home on the May night 23 years ago to meet a teenage friend named Patrick Allain.

Allain, the state’s key witness, testified the two met with Leniart, who was 30 at the time. Allain said he and Leniart raped the girl and he left her with the older man. Leniart told him the next day that he choked Pennington to death and put her remains in a lobster trap that he dropped to the bottom of the Thames River, according to Allain’s testimony included in a summary of the case contained in the Supreme Court decision.

Three inmates who had been jailed with Leniart at various times gave similar testimony. One said Leinart told him that he cut the girl up and put her remains in lobster pots in Long Island Sound. Another testified that Leinart told him the girl was “in the river” and they would never convict him because they would never find her body.

Yet another man, who was not a jailhouse informant, testified that Leniart admitted to killing a 15yearold girl and dumping her body in Long Island Sound.

Howard Ehring, senior public defender in the Stamford courthouse, said the Leinhart case illustrate­s the wellknown legal principal that there is no statute of limitation­s on a murder case, that prosecutor­s can wait a long time to charge someone with murder.

 ?? Jim R. Bounds / Associated Press file photo ?? Hazel Pennington with an undated photo of her daughter April Pennington in Pleasant Garden, N.C. in 2008. Connecticu­t convicted lobsterman George Leinart of April’s murder even though her body has never been found.
Jim R. Bounds / Associated Press file photo Hazel Pennington with an undated photo of her daughter April Pennington in Pleasant Garden, N.C. in 2008. Connecticu­t convicted lobsterman George Leinart of April’s murder even though her body has never been found.

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