Murder case returns to court Monday
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Deirdre Newman
The key witness for the defense team of James Lee Crummel will be
back in a Riverside County courtroom Monday.
Crummel’s defense is trying to get testimony from James Munro
admitted in his upcoming trial. Crummel is charged with killing a
Costa Mesa teenager, Jamey Wilfred Trotter, in 1979.
Munro has told five people, over a period of 22 years, that
executed murderer William Bonin, the infamous “Freeway Killer,”
killed Trotter, said Mary Ann Galante, lead defense for Crummel.
But in court last week, he refused to testify, invoking his rights
not to do so under the Fifth Amendment.
So, he will be back in court this Monday.
“The judge said that he had reconsidered and that he is not sure
that Munro can take the Fifth Amendment,” Galante said.
Whether Munro ultimately takes the stand or not doesn’t alter the
prosecution’s contention that Crummel killed Trotter, Deputy District
Atty. Bill Mitchell said.
“Whether he gets on the stand and answers questions or stands mute
and takes the Fifth doesn’t affect the fact that Bonin wasn’t
responsible for the Trotter murder,” Mitchell said.
Crummel’s defense team filed its request to admit this evidence in
Riverside County Superior Court on Feb. 19. Crummel, who is in prison
on other convictions and was charged with one count of murder with
special circumstances in the Trotter case, pleaded innocent in 2000.
The prosecution contends that Munro has disavowed his statements
blaming Bonin for Trotter’s murder.
Galante said Munro told her he took back those statements because
he is afraid the District Attorney’s office will use his testimony as
a defense witness against him when his parole hearing comes up in
September. Munro is serving a life sentence for being an accomplice
in Bonin’s murder of hitchhiker Steven Wells.
Mitchell said Munro’s alleged reason for recanting his statements
doesn’t make sense.
“If he were coming forward and telling the truth, that would be a
plus for him,” Mitchell said. “If he were lying and then getting on
the stand and committing perjury, that would hurt his chances for
parole, I would think.”
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