Defense continues case despite witness’ denial
Deirdre Newman
A day after James Munro recanted a story linking executed murderer
William Bonin to the murder of a Costa Mesa teenager, a Riverside
County Superior Court judge heard another tape of Munro’s previous
claim.
The defense team of James Lee Crummel, who was arrested in Newport
Beach in 1997 and accused of murdering the 13-year-old boy, is trying
to get this evidence admitted in his trial for allegedly killing
Jamie Lee Trotter. The trial is scheduled to start Monday.
Munro has told five people, over a period of 22 years, that Bonin,
the infamous “Freeway Killer,” killed Trotter, said Mary Ann Galante,
lead defense counsel for Crummel. Munro is serving a life sentence
for being an accomplice in one of Bonin’s murders.
Galante remains confident that Munro’s testimony will be admitted.
“The law is on our side as far as the admission of [Munro’s]
statements because the law says there must be direct or
circumstantial evidence linking Bonin to the actual crime, but it
only has to be evidence capable of raising a reasonable doubt of the
defendant’s guilt,” Galante said.
Deputy District Atty. Bill Mitchell rejects Bonin’s link to
Trotter’s murder.
“I’m tired of hearing about Bonin, especially since he has no
connection to the case,” Mitchell said.
Crummel’s defense team filed its request to admit Munro’s
statements 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.
Bonin was executed in 1996. He was convicted of murdering 14 boys
in Los Angeles and Orange counties in 1979 and 1980.
Tuesday was the third day of the hearing in Judge Dennis
McConaghy’s courtroom. On the first day, Munro refused to testify,
invoking his rights not to do so under the Fifth Amendment. On
Monday, McConaghy ruled that Munro did not have the ability to take
the Fifth and ordered him to testify about Bonin.
Crummel’s defense team played the first tape, from Jan. 9, when
Munro made statements linking Bonin to Trotter. Munro proceeded to
recant those statements, Galante said. Munro also said he didn’t want
to testify in court because he was afraid it would negatively affect
his parole hearing in September, Galante added.
“The fact remains that he didn’t recant any of this until the
prosecution got their hands on him,” Galante said. “His story for the
past 22 years has been consistent and then the district attorney gets
their hands on him a few months before his parole hearing and now
nothing happens.”
Munro also said Monday that Galante and defense investigator Gene
Brisco had offered to represent him, free of charge, at his parole
hearing. Galante vehemently denied that accusation.
“That is absolutely untrue and I’m certainly not putting my
license and integrity on the line for anything,” Galante said.
On Tuesday, Crummel’s defense team played another taped interview
of Munro linking Bonin to Trotter. On this tape, Munro is heard
identifying a picture of Trotter from a line-up and says he is 100%
positive of his choice, Galante said.
McConaghy is expected to rule Monday on whether Munro’s statements
can be admitted.
Before the trial starts later Monday morning, Galante said she
will request that McConaghy dismiss the case against Crummel based on
the defense team’s belief that crucial dental evidence of Trotter’s
is missing.
“The teeth are missing and the original x-rays are missing, so
there’s not enough to prove it was Jaime Trotter,” Galante said.
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