Results tagged “duncan” from Inland Empire Courts
By Stacia Glenn on November 18, 2008 2:47 PM | Permalink | Comments (0) |
(AP) -- A man who was convicted of murdering four people and sentenced to death for one of the murders has filed a notice of appeal in federal court.
Joseph Edward Duncan III was given three death sentences and three life imprisonment sentences in federal court earlier this year for the 205 kidnapping, sexual abuse and torture of 9-year-old Dylan Groene and 8-year-old Shasta Groene, and for Dylan's murder.
He was also given three life imprisonment sentences in state court for the murder of their older brother, Slade Groene, their mother, Brenda Groene, and her fiance, Mark McKenzie.
Riverside County prosecutors intend to extradite convicted child killer Joseph Edward Duncan and try him in the death of a 10-year-old Beaumont boy, despite objections from the father of one of Duncan's other victims.
Earlier this week, a federal judge in Idaho sentenced Duncan to three life prison terms for kidnapping and sexually abusing two children. Those federal terms were in addition to three more life terms, imposed the same day in state court, for the murders of the children's mother, her fiance and the children's 13-year-old brother.
Duncan was sentenced to death in August for the kidnapping, sexual exploitation and murder of 9-year-old Dylan Groene in 2005. The 45-year-old convicted pedophile also kidnapped the boy's younger sister.
Meanwhile, Riverside County prosecutors have been waiting for their chance to prosecute Duncan on charges in the abduction and death of Anthony Martinez.
November 4, 2008 3:12 PM | Permalink | Comments (0)
BOISE (AP) -- The father of Dylan and Shasta Groene says the man who kidnapped his children and received three death sentences should not be tried for additional crimes he is accused in a California slaying.
Ten-year-old Anthony Martinez of Indio was abducted and killed in 1997.
Steve Groene says another trial for convicted child-killer Joseph Duncan could subject the family of that child to the same type of graphic evidence his family had to endure.
Jurors watched a horrifying video Duncan made of his sexually abusing, torturing and hanging Dylan until the boy lost consciousness.
Dylan and then 8-year-old Shasta were taken from their Coeur d'Alene home in 2005. Shasta was rescued after a waitress recognized her at a restaurant.
Duncan received three death penalties in August for the kidnapping, torture and murder of 9-year-old Dylan.
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By Stacia Glenn on November 3, 2008 12:18 PM | Permalink | Comments (0) |
A federal judge in Idaho has sentenced convicted child killer Joseph Duncan, who is also wanted for the kidnapping and killing of a 10-year-old Beaumont boy, to three life prison terms for kidnapping and sexually abusing two children.
Those federal terms imposed today are in addition to three more life terms imposed the same day in state court for the murders of the children's mother, her fiance and the children's 13-year-old brother.
Duncan was sentenced to death in August for the 2005 kidnapping, sexual exploitation and murder of 9-year-old Dylan Groene (GROAN'-ee). The 45-year-old convicted pedophile also kidnapped the boy's younger sister.
Here's the latest news from the Associated Press about the federal trial in Idaho for convicted pedophile Joseph Edward Duncan III. Riverside County prosecutors are awaiting their chance to prosecute Duncan in the 1997 abduction and slaying of 10-year-old Anthony Martinez, who was snatched from his Beaumont home.
Aug. 22, 2008
Jury: Confessed killer of Idaho boy can get death
By REBECCA BOONE
Associated Press Writer
BOISE, Idaho (AP)-- A man who kidnapped, raped, tortured and murdered a 9-year-old Idaho boy was deemed eligible for the death penalty by a jury on Friday, soon after the killer himself came close to thanking prosecutors for showing the panel sickening videos of him abusing the child.
The jury deliberated for two hours before issuing its unanimous ruling. When the hearing resumes next week, jurors must decide whether Joseph Edward Duncan III should be put to death for killing Dylan Groene in 2005.
Friday's verdict was not surprising after Duncan's closing argument, in which he told the jurors they didn't yet "have a clue" about the depths of his "heinousness."
Duncan, 45, didn't react to the verdict. The slain boy's father, Steven Groene, and other family supporters embraced after the verdict but seemed to keep their emotions in check.
Duncan, acting as his own attorney, will have the chance next week to convince jurors to give him life in prison without the possibility of parole instead of a death sentence. The jury's sentencing recommendation is binding on U.S. District Judge Edward Lodge.
Duncan pleaded guilty to 10 federal felonies for the trauma he inflicted on Dylan Groene and his then-8-year-old sister, Shasta, in May 2005 after murdering their older brother, their mother and her fiance in the Coeur d'Alene area.
Duncan pleaded guilty to those three murders in state court, where he also could be sentenced to death. He kidnapped the two young children and took them deep into the Lolo National Forest, where he sexually abused and tortured them for weeks.
He ultimately shot the boy point-blank in the head while his sister watched. He was arrested after returning with Shasta to Coeur d'Alene, where a waitress recognized the girl as the two ate at a Denny's restaurant.
Jurors cringed and cried when they viewed videos Duncan made in which he molested, tortured and hanged Dylan Groene until the boy was unconscious and nearly dead.
Duncan told the panel that government lawyers helped him victimize the jurors by making them watch and listen to the evidence.
"I should actually thank the government for helping me get my eye for an eye by showing you the evidence that you've seen, the videos," Duncan said during his closing argument Friday.
Duncan, a convicted pedophile originally from Tacoma, Wash., told jurors that by presenting the evidence, the government was "helping me to take away your heart and your innocence."
"That's what they have done, and I should thank them but I won't," he said.
Steven Groene declined to discuss the case much, saying a gag order remained in effect, but said he was pleased with the ruling.
Groene said he would lobby for stronger victims' rights in the future. He objected to spectators at the hearing being permitted to view the videos of his son being abused, and said the spectators should have been screened to make sure they weren't sex offenders looking to take pleasure from the highly publicized case.
"My murdered, molested son should have had the same rights as a living victim," Groene said. "I've had too much focus on keeping my family together and protecting my daughter, fighting cancer for the last few years but now that this appears to be close to over, I'm going to work on changing that."
Duncan said he wasn't in court because he was caught, but because Shasta Groene -- the sole survivor of the kidnapping and attack -- didn't judge him for his actions, prompting him to take her home.
It's not yet clear if Shasta will testify -- and face the prospect of being cross-examined by her attacker -- in the next phase of the trial. She did not testify in the phase just completed.
The court has ruled that if the girl does testify, it will be by closed-circuit camera and that the courtroom will be closed to the public, with a transcript of her testimony given to reporters afterward.
Duncan, originally from Tacoma, Wash., was a convicted pedophile before the killings. The rampage was the culmination of years of planning, he said, and he originally intended to rape and kill until he was killed.
Duncan has a long string of arrests and convictions for crimes ranging from car theft to rape and molestation. He is suspected in the slayings of two half-sisters from Seattle in 1996 and is charged with killing 10-year-old Anthony Martinez, of Beaumont, in Riverside County in 1997.
The Associated Press generally does not identify victims of sexual assault. In Shasta and Dylan Groene's cases, however, the search for the children was so heavily publicized that their names are widely known.



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E.T. Snell on Jury says Beaumont suspect eligible for death in Idaho: I wouldn't mind bunk