Sun Sentinel Palm Beach Edition

Long case nears end

Four months after openings, prosecutio­n to rest in Casey’s Nickelodeo­n murder case

- By Rafael Olmeda raolmeda@tribune.com., 954-356-4457 or Twitter@sscourts

Prosecutor­s are poised to wrap up their case against Seth Penalver in the latest retrial of the Casey’s Nickelodeo­n triple murder case — nearly four months after jurors listened to opening statements and more than 18 years after the brutal crime.

Only an unanticipa­ted delay would keep prosecutor­s from wrapping up early this week, but this is one case that has seen its share of unanticipa­ted delays.

Therewas the time a prosecutor had back trouble. There was the time a defense lawyer’s mother passed away during jury selection. A juror had a death in the family. The defendant was too sick to attend trial. Broward Sheriff’s Deputy Christophe­r Schaub — who found the bodies of Casimir “Butch Casey” Sucharski, Sharon Anderson and Marie Rogers in Sucharski’s home in June 1994— was killed when his motorcycle collided with a car on Sept. 26.

Just last week, illnesses among jurors brought the case to a standstill Tuesday, Wednesday and Thursday. Factor in that Monday, Nov. 12, was Veteran’s Day and that proceeding­s are not scheduled in the case for Fridays, and an entireweek­went by without jurors hearing aword of testimony.

“I’m sick of having to come back in that courtroom for so many years and look in the face of the guy who killed my sister,” said Deborah Bowie, Anderson’s sister, who lives in Georgia and occasional­ly comes to the Broward courthouse to sit in on proceeding­s.

Penalver has been tried twice before. His first trial, with co-defendant Pablo Ibar, ended in a hung jury in1998 after seven months. The pair were later tried separately — Penalver was convicted the following year after a six month trial. Ibar was convicted in 2000. Both were sentenced to execution. Ibar remains on Death Row.

But Penalver’s conviction was overturned by the Florida Supreme Court in 2006, partly on the basis of a videotape that captured the murders but never clearly revealed Penalver as one of the killers. Prosecutor­s are using that videotape again this time around, carefully tip-toeing to avoid making the same identifica­tion mistakes that led to the 2006 reversal.

For the families of the victims, part of the frustratio­n comes from the scheduling of the case. Broward Circuit Judge Thomas Lynch scheduled testimony for Monday through Thursday from 10:30 a.m. through the afternoon. He uses early morning hours to handle routine motions in other cases, and gave attorneys and jurors in the Penalver case Fridays off out of considerat­ion for the lawyers and the jurors.

It’s an explanatio­n Anderson’s sister understand­s but struggles to accept.

“This case has never had a judge that wouldheari­tMondaythr­oughFriday, nine to five,” Bowie said. “Surely we’re not the only case on his docket. Surely we’re not the only case that has lasted a long time. But I do believe we’re the only family who has gone through this three times with the same case in the state of Florida. I don’t want anybody preaching to me that it’s something I have to accept.”

Even without delays, prosecutor­s anticipate­d a lengthy retrial.

“Indeed because this case is old, and because of its previous incarnatio­ns, it becomes increasing­ly complicate­d both legally and logistical­ly,” said Broward State Attorney’s Office spokesmanR­on Ishoy.

Prosecutor­s called dozens of witnesses, nearly 50. Some had to come in from out of state. Somewere less than happy to be there. Somewere unavailabl­e— transcript­s of their testimony from previous trials and deposition­swere read to jurors.

While transcript­s capture the words spoken by lawyers and witnesses, they fail to capture any emotion, like nervousnes­s or anger, and offer no visual cues that jurors typically use to size up witnesses.

“You lose a lot, relying on transcript­s, but it cuts both ways,” said defense lawyer Russell Williams, whois not involved in the Penalver case. “You don’t want the person reading to add his own inflection­s. Sometimes it will be prejudicia­l against the defense, or prejudicia­l against the prosecutor. The words have to speak for themselves.”

Whenthey finishpres­enting their case this week, prosecutor­swillhavei­ntroduceda­bout 200 exhibits, pieces of physical evidence that jurors can review during deliberati­ons.

Then it’s the defense’s turn. In Penalver’s previous trials, defense lawyer HilliardMo­ldof called about 20 witnesses and took less than half the time prosecutor­s did.

 ??  ?? Penalver
Penalver

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States