Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

‘Golden State Killer’ admits to 13 murders

Ex-officer’s deal avoids death penalty

- SAM STANTON, DARRELL SMITH, DALE KASLER AND MOLLY SULLIVAN

SACRAMENTO, Calif. — Forty-five years after committing his first murder, Joseph James DeAngelo admitted Monday he was the Golden State Killer — a serial killer and rapist responsibl­e for one of the worst crime rampages in California history.

Looking frail and speaking in a halting voice, the former policeman entered a string of guilty pleas in a Sacramento State ballroom that was converted into a courtroom for the day.

DeAngelo, 74, admitted to a 12-year binge of murder and sexual assaults from the Sacramento area to Orange County that captivated the world’s attention and spawned a multitude of nicknames for the former police officer, including East Area Rapist, Visalia Ransacker and Original Night Stalker.

DeAngelo, who has been confined to the Sacramento County jail since his arrest in April 2018 at his home in Citrus Heights, arrived at the makeshift courtroom at the campus’s University Union about 20 minutes before the hearing began. He was trucked to the University Union in a van that was backed up to a loading dock.

Wearing a jailhouse orange jumpsuit, and a face shield to guard against the spread of the coronaviru­s, DeAngelo agreed to plead guilty to a total of 13 counts of murder and 13 counts of kidnap for robbery, starting with the Nov. 11, 1975, shooting death of college professor Claude Snelling in Visalia in 1975. He also pleaded guilty to committing 62 rapes and other crimes for which he wasn’t formally charged.

Under a plea bargain reached two weeks ago, DeAngelo is expected to be sentenced in August to life in prison without parole.

Prosecutor­s agreed to forgo seeking the death penalty in order to save the cost of taking DeAngelo to trial in what would have been one of the largest and costliest prosecutio­ns in California history. Given DeAngelo’s advanced age, the advanced ages of witnesses and investigat­ors, and Gov. Gavin Newsom’s imposition of a moratorium on executions, prosecutor­s decided it was time to accept a plea deal and not conduct a death penalty trial.

“The family members of murder victims have waited decades for justice,” said Amy Holliday, Sacramento County’s assistant chief deputy district attorney. “The time for justice stands in front of us now.”

More than 150 people attended, including DeAngelo’s victims and relatives of victims, media representa­tives and prosecutor­s from all over the state, forcing courtroom officials to seek a large enough venue that could allow for social distancing during the coronaviru­s pandemic. Most of the lawyers, family members and others wore masks.

The Sacramento State ballroom, which can accommodat­e 2,000 people, was configured for a court hearing, with plastic chairs spaced far apart and a stage set up at one end. Superior Court Judge Michael Bowman sat in the middle of the stage, with DeAngelo and his public defenders on the right and a succession of district attorneys, led by Sacramento’s Anne Marie Schubert, on the left.

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