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Sirens & Gavels

Posts tagged: beyond the northwest

Keller trial underway in Texas

The national spotlight in the legal world this week is on a Texas judge accused of blocking a death row inmate’s access to a last-minute appeal.

The trial of Sharon Keller has incensed both sides of the death penalty debate and is being covered heavily on legal junkie web sites like law.com.

Michael Brick of The New York Times offered this synopsis of the case.

Check out the fine prose he used to sum up a complex case: “The trial, expected to last most of the week, promises to unfold as a finely wrought dance around the details of an afternoon’s timeline.” Beautiful!

The death penalty is rarely used in Spokane County, though there is one case currently being prosecuted as a death penalty case.

That’s the case of Christopher H. Devlin, 56, who’s accused of killing a man who was scheduled to testify against him on an assault charge. Killing a state witness is an aggravating factor that can qualify a defendant for the death penalty.

Carl A. Hoskins, 57, is also charged with first-degree murder in the incident, but the state is not seeking the death penalty. Devlin’s trial is set for March. He’s represented by Mark Vovos. (Read a story on the case here.)

Prosecutors considered seeking the death penalty against accused double murderer Justin W. Crenshaw, 21, but opted not to, leading to several changes in his defense.

Crenshaw’s trial is set for Oct. 12 before Judge Tari Eitzen. He’s represented by Chris Bugbee.

Read past coverage here and here.

Washington woman’s corpse was kept on toilet

MAUSTON, Wis. (AP) — A religious leader accused of hiding the body of a dead follower in a bathroom to keep her social security checks rolling in faces sentencing in Mauston Wednesday.

Fifty-nine-year-old Alan Bushey (boo-SHAY’) of Necedah (neh-SEE’-dah) pleaded no contest to one count of being a party to hiding a corpse in February in a deal with prosecutors. He faces up to 10 years in prison and $25,000 in fines.

Prosecutors say Bushey led the Order of the Divine Will. He and another member of the order, Tammy Lewis, were accused of leaving the body of 90-year-old Alvina Middlesworth, another member of the order, on Lewis’ toilet so they could go on collecting her Social Security. Middlesworth moved to Wisconsin from Washington state in 2005.

A deputy checking on Middlesworth discovered the body in May last year.

About this blog

Reporter Meghann Cuniff writes about public safety news from the Inland Northwest and beyond.

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