Free Republic
Browse · Search
News/Activism
Topics · Post Article

To: All

Carr brothers silent during sentencing

BY RON SYLVESTER - The Wichita Eagle - Sat, Nov. 16, 2002

Jonathan and Reginald Carr just sat there.

The two brothers had their chance to publicly ask for forgiveness Friday, to apologize or show remorse. But they didn't say a word.

The condemned killers didn't even turn around from the defense table, where they had sat silently for 10 weeks of jury selection and trial, as a woman who survived a shooting, rapes and torture called them "two soulless monsters."

The Carrs showed no emotion as Judge Paul Clark approved the harshest sentences allowed under the law: Four consecutive death sentences for each of the brothers, followed by more than 40 more years in prison for crimes ranging from rape to cruelty to animals, and 20-to-life for the fatal shooting of a Wichita cellist.

Following Friday's proceedings, both brothers were taken to the state's El Dorado Correctional Facility.

Even if the state never carries out the executions, Friday's sentencing assured that neither of the brothers will ever again see life outside prison walls or even see a parole board.

In court, Clark told them of their rights under the law to allocution, a legal term meaning they could address the court to ask for mercy or apologize. Both had been advised by their lawyers not to speak.

Jonathan Carr, 22, shook his head and whispered his answer. Reginald Carr, 25, sat without saying a word.

But the woman who survived the Dec 15, 2000, shooting in a soccer field near K- 96 and Greenwich Road and the families of her four friends killed there had plenty to say.

They had remained silent for nearly two years. They had sat in the courtroom, fighting tears and listening to details of the crimes that made their stomachs churn.

Now, they could speak.

"I wake up in sweats from my nightmares. I pace at night because of noises that I think are somebody breaking into my house," said the woman who survived. "There is the fear that evil will once again come into my life and take away the things that are precious to me."

Mark Befort, whose brother Jason planned to propose to the surviving woman before he was shot to death, said the family had lost more than a brother or son. His father died before he could see the men convicted of killing Jason Befort brought to justice.

"This took the life out of him," Mark Befort said, as his family stood beside him. "He died 10 days before his 58th birthday, and he died with a broken heart."

Sadness filled the courtroom. Tears fell from prosecutors, jurors who attended Friday's sentencing and other families.

Detective Rick Craig, described by a defense lawyer as "solid as a rock" earlier in the trial, put his head in his hands and wept.

After the hearing, Wichita Police Chief Norman Williams expressed relief to see the endofthe case -- one of two quadruple homicides that occurred in Wichita in December 2000. The other occurred Dec 7, 2000, when four teenagers were shot to death inside a home at 1144 N. Erie Ave.

"Our hearts go out to the families and friends of the victims of both the quadruple homicides," he said. "Our thoughts are with them, and we will keep them in our prayers."

Police traced the Erie Avenue killings to Cornelius Oliver, who killed his girlfriend and three of her friends. Oliver was convicted and sentenced to life in prison.

But the Carr case horrified Wichitans because of its random nature: A home invasion and robbery that turned into a terrible night of torture, rape and robbery.

Family members still find it difficult to comprehend that lives were taken in a robbery that netted $1,800 and a pickup load of televisions, clothes, watches and jewelry.

"I would freely give my life and all my belongings if Brad were alive today," Larry Heyka said of his son.

Elizabeth Daily, Brad Heyka's mother, said, "People who don't believe that the devil walked the earth have not seen the evidence and the facts that were presented in this courtroom."

Bill Sander, Aaron Sander's father, talked of the toll his family felt the past 23 months during the slow process of a capital murder trial.

"They've taken not only our son, but they've taken our lives, particularly the last two years," Bill Sander said of the Carr brothers.

Lois Muller, whose daughter Heather was killed in the soccer field, compared the vibrant life left dead on that cold December morning to those of the men now condemned for those crimes.

"Heather's eyes were filled with light and love" Lois Muller said. "Reginald and Jonathan Carr's eyes, they have a hollow, empty look, the look of pure evil and hatred, and I know this because I have looked into their eyes."

Callie Lyons, Reginald Carr's sister-in-law, said from her home in Ohio that her family would not dispute the jury's guilty verdict. But she said that she had hoped for sentences of life in prison for the brothers.

Like the families of those who died, Lyons talked of her family's strong Christian faith.

"We have a strong belief that as long as people are alive, they're not above saving," Lyons said. "And that's how we feel about Jon and Reggie."

The Carr brothers' crime spree began Dec 7, 2000, when Andrew Schreiber was carjacked and forced to withdraw money from ATMs. Ann Walenta, a cellist with the Wichita Symphony, was shot four days later during an attempted carjacking. She would later die of her wounds.

Four days after that, Muller, Sander, Heyka and Befort all died kneeling in the soccer field, shot in the back of the head.

"I have to feel that I have done everything in my power to ensure that these two men that sit here today are sentenced to the fullest extent," Schreiber said. "It is not vengeance that I seek, it is just justice."

On Friday, Schreiber got what he and the others sought, as Clark gave the Carrs the maximum sentence under the law.

The Carrs just sat there.

Contributing: Hurst Laviana

Jonathan Carr listens in court Friday, Nov. 15, 2002, as Judge Paul Clark sentenced him to death at the Sedgwick County Courthouse in Wichita, Kan. Jonathan and his brother, Reginald, were sentenced following the deaths of four friends in December 2000. Sititng next to Carr is his attorney, Ron Evans. DAVE WILLIAMS, The Wichita Eagle

Reginald Carr is escorted from the courtroom after being sentenced to death by Judge Paul Clark at the Sedgwick County Courthouse Friday. DAVE WILLIAMS, The Wichita Eagle


21 posted on 11/16/2002 7:48:23 PM PST by KS Flyover
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 1 | View Replies ]


To: All

Families of victims speak of loved ones

BY DION LEFLER - The Wichita Eagle - Sat, Nov. 16, 2002

They were strangers before. Now they are forever tied by tragedy, united by love.

They are the relatives and friends of Jason Befort, Aaron Sander, Heather Muller, Brad Heyka and Ann Walenta, the five people Reginald and Jonathan Carr murdered in a nine-day crime spree in December 2000.

For 23 months, the families and friends have had to endure hearing about the Carr brothers day in and day out -- along with the unimaginable acts of brutality the victims experienced.

But for all that the survivors have lost, "When we walk out of this courtroom today... we've gained a family, all here today," said Megan DeJohn, Heyka's sister.

On Friday, family members finally got their say -- 21 of them, arrayed behind a table in the very courtroom where less than an hour before the Carrs were formally sentenced to die by lethal injection.

There were tears over the crimes. But there were also smiles when family members remembered earlier days, when their loved ones were helping other people and building apparently bright futures.

Shortly before his death, Sander quit a good job with Koch Industries while he contemplated a calling to the Catholic priesthood. The night before the attacks, he and Muller toured a seminary.

"He really cared about people," said his father, Bill Sander. "That's why he was leaving a very good career and searching for what he hoped would provide his purpose in life."

Selfless love was the hallmark of Muller, said her brother, Jamie Muller.

"She had the biggest heart," he said. "She put others before herself, especially children with special needs."

Heyka played golf and won friends. Before embarking on his career with Koch, he was a standout high school and collegiate golfer.

His father, Larry Heyka, said that a memorial tournament last fall drew many more than the 175 golfers the course would allow.

"I think we had people represented from 20 states," he said.

DeJohn said she never realized just what a special relationship she and her brother had.

"I relied on him for advice for everything in my life," she said. "I've saved e-mails that he sent me.... I read those frequently and when I do, I can hear Brad's words. I can hear him."

Mark Befort drew a round of laughs when he recalled how his shy little brother Jason earned the nickname of "Woods" while running a combine in the family's harvesting business.

"When you're out in the middle of the field, I'll say when nature calls, you don't always have the best accommodations," Mark Befort explained. "Meek as he would be, he'd have to hunt woods. So that became his nickname for quite a while."

Jason outgrew that nickname when he became a teacher and coach at Augusta High School.

"His last nickname was 'Coach,' by his friends, by his students and by us," his brother said.

Jason Befort, Aaron Sander, Heather Muller and Brad Heyka -- housemates and friends -- died side by side Dec 15, 2000. They were shot in a snowy soccer field near K-96 and Greenwich Road.

Walenta, a 51-year-old cellist with the Wichita Symphony, was shot four days earlier.

She was going home from a rehearsal for the symphony's holiday concert when she encountered Reginald Carr, who asked for her help and then shot her.

"She was an amazing musician," her daughter, Suzanne Walenta, recalled. "She never gave herself enough credit for that. She taught underprivileged students the cello. She taught anyone the cello who wanted to learn."

Two survived the Carr's crime wave.

Andrew Schreiber, carjacked, kidnapped and robbed Dec 7, 2000, appeared at Friday's news conference. Earlier, he told the judge of the guilt he feels for having lived when so many others died at the Carrs' hands.

Absent was a woman who survived the ordeal. Her identity is being protected because she was a sex-crime victim.

The survivor, whose childhood nickname was "Toughy," survived being shot in the head to run for help. She identified the Carrs as the men who assaulted her and killed her friends.

It has been a tough two years for all the families, even beyond the senseless slayings.

They see the death sentences as a victory -- although a hollow one measured against their losses and the apparent unrepentance of the Carr brothers.

In court appearances, the brothers have repeatedly demonstrated not just indifference, but defiant disdain for the pain they've caused.

"To look at those guys and have them turn around... and look at your mother, look at your sister and wink, or give a smirk, is for me the hardest dang thing," Mark Befort said.

What would the family members say to the Carr brothers if they could?

Friday, they answered that question in staccato:

"I don't think they'd care."

"It's not worth the time."

"It wouldn't make a difference."

"You couldn't print it."

Following the sentencing of Jonathan and Reginald Carr Friday morning, Nov. 15, 2002, at the Sedgwick County Courthouse, victims and family members talk with the media in Judge Paul Clark's court room. JILL JARSULIC, The Wichita Eagle

Mark Befort's eyes fill with tears as he talks about his little brother, Jason, during a press conference that concluded the Carr brother's trial at the Sedgwick County Courthouse Friday afternoon. TRAVIS HEYING, The Wichita Eagle

Family members (from bottom left, clockwise) Bill Sander, Lois Muller, Connie Neises, Mary Jo Heyka, Amy Scott and Larry Heyka reminisce about the victims of the Dec. 15, 2000, quadruple homicide during a press conference Friday afternoon. JILL JARSULIC, The Wichita Eagle

22 posted on 11/16/2002 7:50:22 PM PST by KS Flyover
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 21 | View Replies ]

Free Republic
Browse · Search
News/Activism
Topics · Post Article


FreeRepublic, LLC, PO BOX 9771, FRESNO, CA 93794
FreeRepublic.com is powered by software copyright 2000-2008 John Robinson