Portsmouth Herald

Timothy Verrill faces new jury in grisly murders of 2 women

- Karen Dandurant

DOVER — Prosecutor­s argued Timothy Verrill was the only person who could have killed Christine Sullivan and Jenna Pellegrini in Farmington seven years ago, making their case Tuesday in the opening of Verrill’s second trial.

The women were killed at the 979 Meaderboro Road home of Dean Smoronk, with whom Sullivan had a relationsh­ip, prosecutor­s said.

The defense, in contrast, attempted to cast doubt on the investigat­ions done at the time, portraying Verrill as the convenient person for the prosecutio­n to blame for the killings, suggesting there were more people who could have, and probably did, commit the heinous crimes.

Attorneys for both sides presented their opening statements Tuesday and began questionin­g witnesses. Verrill, 41, sat quietly as the proceeding began.

Verrill’s first trial on the murder charges ended in a mistrial in October 2019 because New Hampshire State Police failed to provide all the evidence to the defense. Verrill is charged with killing Sullivan, who was 48, and Pellegrini, 32, on Jan. 27, 2017. Prosecutor­s previously said Verrill believed the women had been informing authoritie­s about drug traffickin­g by Verrill, Sullivan and Sullivan’s boyfriend, Smoronk.

Smoronk has been found guilty and sentenced in multiple cases involving drugs and firearms in New Hampshire and out of state.

Evidence police failed to provide in the first trial, which led to a mistrial being declared, included five witness interview recordings and various emails and text messages investigat­ors exchanged with witnesses. As a result, the discovery evidence was not provided to the defense until late in the first trial.

Prosecutor­s say women were stabbed dozens of times

DEB CRAM/FOSTER'S DAILY DEMOCRAT

In his opening statement, Assistant Attorney General Brian Greklek-McKeon portrayed Verrill as a “paranoid drug dealer.” He said on Jan. 27, 2017, Verrill stabbed Sullivan eight times, and used blunt force trauma that was so severe, it fractured her skull and caused bleeding in her brain. He said she was alive for at least part of the attack and fought back, sustaining many defensive wounds. He said Verrill stabbed Pellegrini 43 times in the neck, chest and back and also used blunt force trauma and she was likely sleeping when the attack began so she did not fight back.

Greklek-McKeon said Verrill took disorganiz­ed steps to try and hide the crimes, discarding their bodies beneath the porch, and making efforts to clean the blood and remove other evidence on trash bags. The bags later were found with Verrill's prints on them, he said.

Verrill faces felony counts of first-degree murder, and second-degree murder as an alternativ­e theory for both women. He is also charged with falsifying physical evidence for his alleged efforts to hide the bodies and other evidence.

Greklek-McKeon showed mass transit video he said proves Smoronk was in Florida at the time of the killings and could not have killed the women. The state provided text messages from Florida when Smoronk was trying angrily to reach Sullivan and Tuesday's first witness, Vanessa Mango.

Mango testified Smoronk was with her and she was his girlfriend in that state.

Video presented by the state showed Verrill, Sullivan and Pellegrini at the Meadorboro Road residence on Jan. 27. At one point, Verrill appeared to enter a detached garage and spray painted the windows green. Cans of spray paint with his fingerprin­ts on it were found, prosecutor­s said.

The prosecutio­n stated Verrill was staying with Joshua Colwell, another associate in Farmington. Earlier testimony transcript­s indicated Colwell said Verrill was at his place, acting erraticall­y, asking if he thought Pellegrini was an informant. He said Verrill said he was going to go back to Smoronk's house and set up his own cameras.

The state alleges Verrill, after the murders, tried to clean up. GreklekMcK­eon said he wrapped the women's bodies in bedding, cloths and tarps, then put them under the porch, piling junk on top of them “as if they were trash.”

Greklek-McKeon said Verrill returned to Colwell's house, grabbed a beer and went inside, saying it was an interestin­g night.

”He asked for a pair of pants and started drinking shots,” said GreklekMcK­eon. “He told Josh he had to tie up a few loose ends. He went to Walmart and bought a phone, at Lowe's he bought salt melt and ammonia cleaners.”

Greklek-McKeon said Verrill returned to Smoronk's house to clean up, using the ice melt to try and eradicate a blood stain on the ice on the porch, where he said Sullivan was likely killed.

Greklek-McKeon said when Smoronk could not reach Sullivan, he made arrangemen­ts to return from Florida, and also authorized friends to break into his home to look for the women. In Pellegrini's room, the friends found a bloodstain­ed mattress, prosecutor­s said.

At that time, Greklek-McKeon said, Verrill called his mother and asked to go to rehab. She took him to WentworthD­ouglass Hospital in Dover.

Smoronk arrived home Jan. 28 about 1:30 a.m. He turned on his surveillan­ce systems, which had been turned off and looked at Jan 27, finding there was 1 day, 17 hours and 18 minutes missing, prosecutor­s said. He called police two hours later.

“There is no boogeyman; there is only Verrill,” said Greklek-McKeon, echoing what was said in Verrill's first trial in 2019.

In his opening statement, public defender Matthew McNicoll said “Christine and Jenna fought back, very hard. Tim had no reason to kill, no motive, yet the state will ask you to convict a man of a murder he did not commit.”

McNicoll said the defense planned to ask questions the state will not be able to answer.

“The state's inability starts with the investigat­ion,” he said, referring to the discovery issue that resulted in the new trial. “The state will tell you it's all true, what's done is done, but there is no transformi­ng an unreliable investigat­ion into a reliable one.”

McNicoll said the state collected evidence and ignored leads that should have been looked at more closely.

“Based on that they made choices and decisions about this case they shouldn't have,” he said. “This case starts with drugs. This is a universe of people buying and selling drugs, and about growing their drug enterprise. Tim sold drugs, used them. He was growing detached from the world. Dean and Christine met in Florida and she came to help the drug operations here. Dean had a home in Florida, too, Christine had a business selling secondhand items she refurbishe­d.”

McNicoll said Smoronk wanted Christine out of his life. He said Colwell was a high-ranking member of a motorcycle gang who owed money to Smoronk and acted as an enforcer, helping to collect debts owed to Smoronk.

McNicoll said the investigat­ion “tunnel visioned” on Verrill, ignoring other avenues.

“Think critically about what you see and don't see,” he urged the jury. “Look at evidence like DNA and fingerprin­ts. They are his, but how did they get there?

McNicoll said both women were alive and happy when Verrill was there and when he left.

“He had no motive to kill them,” he said. “Speculatio­n said he was unwell. Consider the other players and their suspicious behavior, their associatio­ns. The state needs to prove who killed, but they are pointing at the wrong man. Tim did not kill them, and he is not guilty.”

Tracey Flaherty, intelligen­ce analyst for New Hampshire State Police's Major Crimes Unit, testified phone records supported the state's contention Smoronk made many attempts to reach Sullivan on the night of the murder.

Brentwood Officer Evon Cary, who was a Farmington police officer at the time of the 2017 murders, testified being called by Smoronk to report his girlfriend was missing and described a bloody scene at the home.

 ?? ?? Timothy Verrill walks back into the courtroom after a lunch break during the first day of his second double murder trial at Strafford County Superior Court in Dover Tuesday.
Timothy Verrill walks back into the courtroom after a lunch break during the first day of his second double murder trial at Strafford County Superior Court in Dover Tuesday.

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