Los Angeles Times

More swabs from murder suspect OKd

Prosecutor­s take extra DNA samples from man accused of being Golden State Killer.

- Associated press

A Northern California judge on Thursday approved prosecutor­s’ request to take more DNA samples from a man charged with being the Golden State Killer.

Sacramento County Superior Court Judge Steve White also told prosecutor­s to informally decide who is empowered to consider defense attorneys’ offer to have Joseph James DeAngelo Jr. plead guilty in exchange for avoiding the death penalty. So far, prosecutor­s have not wavered from their intent to seek DeAngelo’s execution if he is convicted.

The 74-year-old former police officer is suspected of at least 13 murders and more than 50 rapes across California in the 1970s and ’80s. Six counties have consolidat­ed their cases in Sacramento County, and four of those counties are seeking the death penalty.

“Who’s in charge? Who can make decisions? We want to settle the case,” said defense attorney Alice Michel, adding later that “I don’t know who I’m supposed to talk to.”

Defense attorneys questioned in court filings whether Sacramento County Dist. Atty. Anne Marie Schubert could alone negotiate a plea deal, or whether she would need agreement from prosecutor­s in Santa Barbara, Orange and Ventura counties. DeAngelo also faces lesser charges in Tulare and Contra Costa counties.

That “is something that you probably should be entitled to know,” White said while urging the attorneys to work it out among themselves.

Gov. Gavin Newsom has a moratorium on executions while he is governor. But DeAngelo’s trial is probably several years away after what is projected to be a weeks-long preliminar­y hearing set to begin in May.

White allowed prosecutor­s, over defense objections, to take four more cheek-swab DNA samples from DeAngelo as they try to link him to old crimes.

Investigat­ors surreptiti­ously collected DNA from DeAngelo more than two years ago that they say proves he is the armed and masked rapist who broke into couples’ suburban homes at night.

Collecting more DNA “is a minimally invasive procedure, unlike the crimes committed against so many of our victims,” said Cheryl Temple, a prosecutor from

Ventura County who handled that portion of the hearing.

Investigat­ors pioneered a method of building a family tree from old crime scene DNA, using a popular online database to find a distant relative and eventually zero in on DeAngelo. The new process has since been used nationwide in other cases.

DeAngelo haltingly entered a courtroom cage supported at the elbows by two deputies. As usual, he never glanced at the spectators, looking instead in the general direction of the judge and nearly a dozen video and still cameras. He usually has stood ramrod straight during his hearings. On Thursday

he periodical­ly slumped forward.

His defense is being handled only by the Sacramento County public defender’s office, which says it is overwhelme­d by the voluminous evidence in the case. It wants assistance from public defenders in the other counties.

White said what he called “an imbalance of resources” is “not right, it’s not appropriat­e,” though he had no immediate solution.

“It’s legitimate to coordinate these cases into one county,” White said, though defense attorneys are separately arguing that they have not been properly consolidat­ed.

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