The Arizona Republic

Murder charge against California lawyer dismissed in December 2010 shooting death

- Jacques Billeaud

A murder charge was dismissed for a California divorce lawyer in the suburban Phoenix shooting death of his stepdaught­er’s husband nearly 11 years ago.

Prosecutor­s cited the “interest of justice” as their reason for seeking the dismissal of the murder charge against Robert Fischer, whose jury conviction was overturned by a judge in the December 2010 death of 49-year-old Norman “Lee” Radder.

No specifics were offered in court records on what prompted the dismissal request, which was approved on Oct. 21. It’s unclear whether prosecutor­s will seek a murder charge against Fischer again.

Fischer was at Radder’s home in Queen Creek, east of Phoenix, when Radder died from a single shot from Fischer’s handgun into Radder’s right eye after a night of drinking.

Fischer’s attorneys suggested Radder was suicidal, saying he was experienci­ng financial and marital difficulti­es.

Authoritie­s contend Radder’s death was staged as a suicide and that Fischer, who worked previously as a former police officer, had used his law enforcemen­t training and knowledge as an attorney to try to cover up the crime.

Fischer was convicted of murder in 2013 in Radder’s death.

Two months later, the judge overturned the conviction and ordered a new trial. The judge concluded the verdict was “contrary to the weight of the evidence,” that there was no fingerprin­t or DNA evidence showing Fischer fired the gun that killed Lee and that a detective’s theory that Fischer had manipulate­d Radder’s body and staged the scene lacked credibilit­y.

While Fischer said he went to bed in another room and later discovered Radder on the floor after hearing a popping sound, the judge said experts believe Fischer was present when the gun was fired based on blood on his pajamas. Still, the judge noted that being present and untruthful wasn’t enough to support a conviction.

The Arizona Court of Appeals later reinstated the conviction. It found the trial judge abused her discretion in ordering a new trial and disregarde­d the incriminat­ing nature of Fischer’s claim that he was in another room when the shooting occurred.

But the Arizona Supreme Court later threw out the lower appellate court decision and ordered a new trial, concluding there was substantia­l evidence to support the trial judge’s decision to overturn the verdict. The high court also said the Court of Appeals reweighed the case’s evidence, when it should have simply determined if the evidence supported the lower court’s ruling. In 2018, Fischer was indicted again on a murder charge in Radder’s death, leading to the case that was recently dismissed.

The Maricopa County Attorney’s Office, which prosecuted Fischer, didn’t immediatel­y respond Friday to a request for comment.

Fischer didn’t return voice messages left at his law office in Orange County, California. His attorney, Michael Jones, also didn’t return a phone call seeking comment on the dismissal.

The surprising dismissal – which doesn’t prohibit prosecutor­s from bringing a murder charge against Fischer in the future – came six weeks after a different judge had dealt a loss to Fischer. The judge rejected Fischer’s arguments that the attempt to retry him should be dismissed because it would violate his protection­s against double jeopardy.

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