The Mercury News

Life sentence for Golden State Killer was the right move

- By George Skelton George Skelton is a Los Angeles Times columnist. © 2020, Los Angeles Times. Distribute­d by Tribune Content Agency.

The Golden State Killer is the perfect example of why the death penalty is justified — and why life in prison is preferable.

Especially in California, where a death penalty sentence is practicall­y meaningles­s.

Joseph James Deangelo Jr. — also dubbed the Visalia Ransacker, East Area Rapist or Original Night Stalker, depending on the community he terrorized — was among “the worst of the worst.”

“He is the real-life version of Hannibal Lecter,” Sacramento County District Attorney Anne Marie Schubert told reporters, referring to the fictitious psychopath­ic killer in the movie “The Silence of the Lambs.”

Schubert spoke June 29 after Deangelo pleaded guilty to 13 murders and 13 charges of kidnapping for purposes of robbery during 13 years of horror up and down California.

Deangelo also admitted to 161 uncharged crimes of rape, attempted murder, robbery, burglary and kidnapping involving 61 victims. There were 42 uncharged rapes. These crimes weren’t prosecuted because the statutes of limitation­s had long ago expired.

He was “a cruel, intelligen­t, sadistic serial killer,” Schubert said. “He is a sociopath. He is a master manipulato­r.”

During the 1970s and 1980s, Deangelo would break into couples’ homes at night while they were asleep, force the woman to tie up her husband or boyfriend with shoestring­s, then bind the woman. He’d place saucers and cups on the man’s back as an alarm system and warn that if he heard them rattle, everyone in the house would be killed.

He’d drag the woman into another room and rape her repeatedly, sometimes witnessed by her children. He threatened to cut the ears off one little girl if she screamed. Meanwhile, he ransacked the house and helped himself to refrigerat­or snacks.

In the end, Deangelo would kill the couple anyway by shooting or bludgeonin­g them — with a pipe wrench or a sprinkler head or a fireplace log.

“What’s so frustratin­g,” Orange County District Attorney Todd Spitzer said, referring to the prosecutor­s’ and defendant’s agreed-upon sentence of life imprisonme­nt without possibilit­y of parole, “is that if anyone is the poster child for the death penalty, it’s Deangelo.”

Opponents of capital punishment argue that it’s administer­ed unfairly and sometimes against people who may be innocent. They also point out that people of color, the poor and those with mental illness are disproport­ionately executed.

But none of that applies to Deangelo. There’s no question of his guilt, not just because he confessed, but because DNA linked him to the crimes unequivoca­lly. Moreover, he’s white, middle class and college educated — a former policeman fired for shopliftin­g. Deangelo had plenty of opportunit­y.

His life was spared not out of mercy, but because of practicali­ties.

Prosecutor­s from six counties decided unanimousl­y not to seek the death penalty for several sound reasons.

Most importantl­y, they traded an unlikely future execution for Deangelo’s agreement to admit committing not only the charged murders and kidnapping­s, but all the rapes and other crimes that legally couldn’t be prosecuted.

That was important for the rape survivors and victims’ families. They’ll have an opportunit­y to speak directly to Deangelo when he is formally sentenced on Aug. 17.

If prosecutor­s had not agreed to life imprisonme­nt, Spitzer says, Deangelo “never would have admitted to the crimes. The admissions were significan­t.”

That raises another point often argued by supporters of capital punishment: The possibilit­y of the death penalty is needed as leverage to persuade killers not only to plead guilty, but to confess to other unsolved murders they committed and disclose where bodies were left.

There’s another reason for not seeking the death penalty for Deangelo. At 74 and appearing frail — although some prosecutor­s believe he’s faking frailty — it’s very doubtful he would have lived long enough to be executed.

“It would have taken 10 years to go to trial and the trial would have lasted two years,” Spitzer says. “Then there’d be 20 to 25 years of appeals. …

“Most of the surviving adult victims would probably not be with us anymore. And we were losing witnesses. They were dying.”

All those years of legal proceeding­s would have cost taxpayers many wasted millions and court systems’ precious energy and time.

Thankfully, Deangelo’s prosecutor­s made the wise decision to save many millions of tax dollars and years of time — and obtained 187 confession­s.

Regardless of the life or death sentence, the depraved Deangelo will die behind bars.

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