Posted on 08/26/2002 4:39:57 PM PDT by runningbear
Breaking News
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Posted on Mon, Aug. 26, 2002
Stayner guilty of Yosemite murders
ASSOCIATED PRESS
FILE
Cary Stayner
Yosemite killer Cary Stayner was convicted Monday of murdering three park tourists in a crime that spread fear through Central California and shattered the serene image of one of America's most treasured places.
The 41-year-old former motel handyman faces the death penalty after being convicted of three counts of first-degree murder and additional felonies in the killings of a Eureka mother, her daughter and a teenage friend from Argentina in February 1999.
Defense lawyers conceded that Stayner killed Carole Sund, 42, her daughter, Juli, 15, and Silvina Pelosso, 16, but they said he was crazy and asked jurors to convict him of second-degree murder, a verdict that would have spared him the death penalty.
Stayner, 41, confessed to killing the trio who were staying at the rustic motel where he worked as a handyman outside Yosemite National Park. The disappearance of the three gained worldwide attention and spread fear through Central California as the culprit remained at large.
The crime was unsolved for nearly six months until Stayner struck again, snatching Yosemite nature guide Joie Armstrong and beheading her near her cabin in the park in July 1999. He's serving life in prison without chance of parole after pleading guilty in federal court to first-degree murder in Armstrong's death.
The sightseer case is being held in state court because the Sunds and Pelosso were slain outside the park.
Stayner's lawyers plan to present an insanity defense to try to spare his life. Jurors have already heard extensive testimony from experts that Stayner was impaired by a medley of mental illness symptoms and a deformed brain. At this stage in the trial that evidence was used by the defense to show he didn't kill intentionally.
(Excerpt) Read more at bayarea.com ...
Stayner is the face of evil.
That was my first thought. . .kept looking at the picture; looking for a even a hint of evil. . .
. . .like maybe if he smiled; we could see something missing in his eyes or something.
. . .but the reality is that real evil has it's own asthetic and is never easily recognized and hence it's power.
SAN JOSE, Calif. - A former motel handyman was convicted today of the 1999 slayings of three Yosemite park tourists in a crime that shattered the serene image of one of America's most treasured places.
No one could make up a family story like this.
Cary Stayner was found guilty Monday of the murders of Yosemite visitors Carole and Julie Sund and Sylvina Pelosso by a San Jose jury.
California Passes Bill Making Gun Lawsuits Easier
Christine Hall, CNSNews.com
Monday, Aug. 26, 2002
California's Democratically controlled General Assembly Friday passed a bill making it easier to sue gun makers. The bill, sponsored by Assemblyman Paul Koretz, D-West Hollywood, changes a 1983 law that explicitly exempted gun manufacturers from liability in suits alleging willful or negligent acts or omissions in the design, distribution and marketing of firearms and ammunition.
"This is a legal earthquake for the gun industry," said Luis Tolley of the Brady Campaign to Prevent Gun Violence united with the Million Mom March, which sponsored the bills and organized dozens of gun victims to lobby legislators.
"Gun manufacturers are facing judgment day," said Tolley. "They will no longer be able to hide from the courts and escape legal accountability when they engage in dangerous and irresponsible conduct that hurts and kills people."
The Brady Campaign is hoping to replicate an Ohio Supreme Court ruling in June that reinstated Cincinnati's lawsuit against the industry and allowed the city to proceed with product liability, negligence and public nuisance claims against fifteen gun manufacturers. Similar suits are pending in twelve California cities and counties.
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