A CLOSER LOOK -- A tale of two families continues
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Deepa Bharath
The families of Eric and Pegye Bechler will move on after last week’s
guilty verdict, but in dramatically different ways.
Pegye’s parents, her brother and three sisters, will try to bury their
murdered loved one in their own minds. Without her body, which was never
found, it is the most they can do.
But Eric Bechler’s family will continue to fight for his acquittal by
appealing the verdict.
A 12-member jury convicted Bechler on Thursday of first-degree murder
for killing his 38-year-old wife during what was supposed to have been a
celebratory boating excursion off the Newport Beach coast more than three
years ago.
Jurors also found him guilty of “lying in wait” or suddenly ambushing
his victim -- his wife. But they acquitted him of the charge that he
murdered Pegye, a successful physical therapist and businesswoman, for
financial gain.
The prosecution argued Bechler wanted to cash in on Pegye’s
$2.5-million life insurance policy. Once sentenced on March 16, Bechler
will spend the rest of his life in prison without the possibility of
parole.
Eric Bechler’s defense attorney, John Barnett, said Friday he will
appeal the jury’s decision based on jurisdiction and “corpus” issues.
Barnett submitted a motion to the Orange County Superior Court during
the trial saying the case should be dismissed because, according to
prosecution accounts, Bechler hit his wife on the head with a 35-pound
dumbbell and weighted her body into the ocean about eight to 10 miles off
the coast of Newport Beach, well outside the state’s jurisdiction.
That motion, strategically submitted by Barnett right after the
prosecution rested its case, was denied by Judge Frank F. Fasel because
he said there was enough evidence that Bechler had embarked on the
murderous voyage with his wife equipped with weights, trash bags and
dumbbells.
But Barnett still disagrees with that ruling.
“The prosecution’s evidence does not prove the incident happened
within California’s territorial waters,” he said. According to him, the
state’s jurisdiction ends within four miles of the coast.
Proving a crime happened
Another factor that is part of the appeal is the “corpus” issue -- in
other words a “body of evidence” that could be negated because of lack of
proof that a crime happened.
The law states the court should not consider any of the defendant’s
statements unless there is evidence of a crime. And usually the victim’s
body is the prime proof that a murder was committed.
“If they redact everything Eric said -- to the police, to Tina, to
Kobi there is no way to prove a crime here,” Barnett said.
He was referring to what was considered to be the most telling
evidence in the case -- as set of surreptitiously recorded tapes that
contained conversations between Bechler and his former girlfriend Tina
New. Also significant was the testimony of Bechler’s best friend, Kobi
Laker, who said Bechler told him four months before Pegye’s disappearance
that he was thinking about stuffing her in a barrel and dumping her in
the ocean.
Both legal issues put forth by Barnett are “pretty good issues,” said
Lloyd Freeberg, an Orange County defense attorney.
“They are also fascinating issues,” he said, “because the lack of a
body always leaves open questions about the wounds and manner of death.
There’s no way to prove that without the body or blood.”
Most states have usually ruled on issues of jurisdiction before and
have definite ways of dealing with the problem, said Martin Levine,
professor of criminal law at USC.
“Every state has a rule relating to the jurisdiction issue,” he said.
“I’m sure California does too, although I haven’t read it.”
It is something that could turn out to be a valid legal issue in the
Court of Appeals, said Levine.
Barnett said Bechler’s family is “determined to proceed” with the
appeal process, and he is “optimistic” about its chances.
Pegye’s family, on the other hand, is facing challenges of a very
different kind. Her parents, Glenn and June Marshall, who live in Dexter,
N.M., have been given permanent legal custody of two of the Bechlers’
three children. One other child is with one of Pegye’s sisters.
The children’s well-being is among the family’s immediate concerns,
said Pegye’s brother, Larry Marshall.
“Our hope is that we can be positive factors in their lives and help
set them on the ground,” he said. “We have a lot to talk about as a
family.”
Marshall, who was also his sister’s insurance agent, said it is not
clear yet who will be the beneficiary of Pegye Bechler’s life insurance
policy worth $2.5 million. A number of issues must be settled before that
can be determined, he said.
Community support
In the city of Dexter, a small, close-knit community of 1,200, people
are rallying around the Marshalls.
Fellow church members have organized a prayer chain for the family,
said Margaret Reid, a friend of the family.
“I pray for them every day as I’m sure many others in our community
do,” she said. “They are such a wonderful family, and this is a terrible
thing that happened to them.”
Reid added that younger mothers in the community have come forward to
take turns looking after the children when the Marshalls had to fly to
California for the trial.
“Others take food over sometimes,” she said. “People talk to them in
an encouraging way. We do what we can because we really respect the
family and care about them.”
The Marshalls were pioneer settlers who moved into the little town of
Dexter, with its brown, arid landscape dotted with dairy farms. The
Marshalls settled here in the 1800s when the first railroad was built.
Reid describes her town as quiet and peaceful, one where “people are
educated” and a town “that’s just a nice place to come home to.”
It was in this community that Pegye Marshall was born, the fourth of
five children. She had an older brother, two older sisters and one
younger sister.
Most of her family and friends remember Pegye as strong, athletic and
cheerful. She was nicknamed “the frog” as a child because of her
abilities as a swimmer. She participated in the Milkman Marathon that was
held the first Saturday of June every year. She won many of them.
In June 1997, she came back to Dexter for two reasons -- to
participate in the marathon and to celebrate her parents’ 50th wedding
anniversary. Her family never saw her again.
The emotion is so overwhelming, it is even hard to talk about Pegye or
describe who she was, her brother said.
“Oh, Pegye,” he sighed. “She was a first-grader when I was a senior in
high school. She was happy, jolly, carefree and she just had tremendous
energy and an engaging smile.”
According to Reid, whose daughter and Pegye were on the swim team in
the local high school, Pegye was a person “who always took charge when
she was with kids her age.”
“She always liked to see the positive in everything,” said Reid. “She
loved music. She played the piano. She had a strict, yet kind
upbringing.”
Pegye also had strong moral values and liked to do things her way.
Reid recalled reading a news story where she read that Bechler called his
wife “controlling.”
“And I thought ‘I bet she was controlling,”’ Reid said. “But that’s no
reason to kill a person. Pegye had a lot of wonderful, wonderful
qualities.”
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