Los Angeles Times

CEO is charged a 3rd time in 1992 slaying

- By Christian Martinez

A tech executive has been arrested and charged for the third time in connection with a woman’s 1992 killing in the Bay Area after new evidence was discovered, prosecutor­s said this week.

John Kevin Woodward, 58, chief executive of online training company ReadyTech, was arrested July 9 at John F. Kennedy Internatio­nal Airport in New York after arriving from Amsterdam.

Woodward is accused of killing Laurie Houts, a 25year-old computer engineer who was found dead in her car in Mountain View, not far from her office at Adobe Systems.

He was tried twice in the 1990s in connection with Houts’ death; both trials ended in hung juries, said Santa Clara County Deputy Dist. Atty. Rob Baker.

A judge dismissed the case after the second mistrial, telling prosecutor­s it could be refiled only if new evidence was obtained, Baker said.

Nearly three decades later, prosecutor­s say advances in forensic science technology have allowed them to link Woodward to the rope used to strangle Houts.

On Sept. 5, 1992, Houts was found dead in her vehicle in Mountain View, near a garbage dump about a mile from where she worked.

The rope was still around her neck, and her footprints were found on the interior of the windshield in “a sign of her struggle with Woodward,” the Santa Clara County district attorney’s office said.

An investigat­ion found Woodward was “openly jealous” of Houts’ romantic relationsh­ip with his roommate, with whom Woodward had “developed an unrequited romantic attachment,” prosecutor­s said.

His fingerprin­ts were found on the outside of Houts’ vehicle, but investigat­ors could not prove that he was inside the vehicle.

Last year, new technology that was used to process DNA collected from the rope and other evidence at the scene “came back matching Woodward’s DNA,” the Mountain View Police Department said in a news release.

“Over 80 latent fingerprin­ts that were also collected at the time of Laurie’s death were re-examined by the Santa Clara County Sheriff ’s Identifica­tion Unit, which resulted in even more fingerprin­ts matching Woodward,” police said.

Dutch authoritie­s, in cooperatio­n with the U.S. Department of Justice, obtained search warrants for Woodward’s home and business in the Netherland­s, seizing computers and USB drives.

Woodward had moved to the Netherland­s, where ReadyTech has an office, after the second mistrial.

ReadyTech, which according to its website was founded in Oakland in 1993, said in a statement that Woodward’s arrest “was a jolt to all of us.”

“We have the utmost empathy for the families involved,” the company said. “ReadyTech will draw upon the strength of our longtime leadership team to support our employees, our customers and our business during this time.”

Woodward was being held without bail in New York and awaiting extraditio­n to California. He faces life in prison if convicted.

In a statement released by Mountain View police, Houts’ family said they were hopeful that “justice can finally be served.”

“Laurie Anne Houts was a beloved family member and friend to many,” the family said.

“The way Laurie lived and treated people was a stunning example of what was right in the world. She was a gem to so many, but her bright life was taken from us at the age of 25.”

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