Imperial Valley Press

Colorado men accused of taking ‘memento’ photo after rockthrowi­ng death appear in court

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GOLDEN, Colo. ( AP) — Authoritie­s don’t know which of three young men accused of driving around and throwing rocks at passing cars in suburban Denver hurled the one that killed a 20-year-old woman, the lead investigat­or in the case said Wednesday.

Jefferson County Sheriff ’s Office investigat­or Dan Manka testified that the only DNA evidence found on the rock that crashed through Alexa Bartell’s windshield on April 19 was her own. He also said that there was no DNA evidence linking Joseph Koenig, Nicholas Karol- Chik and Zachary Kwak to any of the other six other rock- throwing attacks they are accused of earlier that night.

Manka spoke during a court hearing to determine whether there is enough evidence for the men to stand trial on first- degree murder charges in Bartell’s death as well as attempted murder charges for the other attacks.

Koenig and Karol- Chick, both 19, are also charged with attempted

murder and attempted assault for allegedly throwing a landscapin­g statue at a car with a family inside on April 1.

Defense lawyers questioned Manka about the DNA evidence Wednesday and drew attention to conflictin­g statements two of the men gave to authoritie­s about who was responsibl­e for Bartell’s death.

Kwak, 18, who said he only recently met the other two defendants, said that Koenig was driving the pickup truck they were in and threw the rock. Karol- Chick, who described Koenig as his best friend, pointed the finger at Kwak.

Kwak’s lawyer, Emily Boehme, said that Kwak vehemently denied throwing the fatal rock when he was interviewe­d.

Koenig did not talk to investigat­ors after he was arrested, according to court documents.

The men were arrested several days after Bartell was hit in the head while driving northwest of Denver and talking on the phone with a friend. After the call went si

lent, the friend tracked Bartell’s location with a phone app and found the suburban Denver woman dead in her car, which had crashed into a field.

Investigat­ors have said Bartell was killed by the rock and not the crash.

According to court documents, the men, all 18 at the time, circled back to take a photo of the crashed car as a “memento.”

Investigat­ors said at the time that they believed the attack was linked to similar incidents in which rocks between 4 and 6 inches (10 and 15 centimeter­s) in diameter and weighing 3 to 5 pounds (1.4 to 2.7 kilograms) were thrown at cars in the area the night of Bartell’s death.

The attacks started just after 10 p.m. and involved at least seven vehicles. In addition to Bartell’s death, three people suffered minor injuries.

Karol-Chik told investigat­ors that Koenig slowed down so Kwak could get a photo of Bartell’s car, according to arrest affidavits. Karol- Chik also said the three got excited

every time they hit a car with a rock that night but acknowledg­ed he felt “a hint of guilt” passing by Bartell’s car, according to the documents.

Kwak said he took the photo because he thought that Karol- Chik or Koenig would want to have a “memento” of what had happened, according to the affidavits.

The teens were arrested at their suburban Denver homes after being identified as suspects with the help of cellphone tower data and another friend who had been hanging out with them earlier that day.

The friend told investigat­ors that Koenig often participat­es in “destructiv­e behavior” because “he likes causing ‘chaos,’” according to court documents. He told sheriff ’s investigat­ors he asked to be taken home after he saw the three others taking landscapin­g rocks from a Walmart parking lot and loading them into Karol- Chik’s pickup, because he said he knew something bad was going to happen, according to the documents.

 ?? ERIC LUTZENS/THE DENVER POST VIA AP ?? A roadside memorial for Alexa Bartell, age 20, who was killed by a rock thrown at her vehicle on April 19 stands on April 28, in Broomfield, Colo.
ERIC LUTZENS/THE DENVER POST VIA AP A roadside memorial for Alexa Bartell, age 20, who was killed by a rock thrown at her vehicle on April 19 stands on April 28, in Broomfield, Colo.

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