Tuesday, October 7, 2014

Bashara murder trial likely to draw media frenzy

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(Photo: Charles V. Tines , The Detroit News )
Grosse Pointe Park – — People across the country have been riveted by the case of Robert Bashara from the day he appeared on national television nearly three years ago, dabbed at his eyes and bemoaned the brutal killing of his wife.
After several bizarre twists, turns, delays and surprises, Bashara, a former church usher, charity fundraiser and Rotary Club president, is set to stand trial beginning Tuesday for the Jan. 24, 2012, murder of his wife, Jane.
“This case has everything: Sex, infidelity, murder, a prominent man from the Grosse Pointes — all the things that compel people,” University of Detroit-Mercy law professor Larry Dubin said.
Court-watchers nationwide are expected to zero in on the proceedings, although live-streaming will not be allowed during the trial that is expected to cause a media frenzy. At least two national television shows have informed Wayne Circuit Court officials they plan to cover the trial.
“There are many elements that are driving the interest in this case,” Dubin said. “Early on, you had a man who confessed to killing the victim,” referring to developmentally disabled handyman Joseph Gentz. He walked into the Grosse Pointe Park police station days after the killing to confess, only to be turned away. He eventually was arrested and convicted of second-degree murder.
Gentz said he was hired by Bashara, 56, to strangle Jane in the garage of their stately home on Middlesex and dump her body inside her Mercedes Benz SUV in an alley on Detroit’s east side.
Another element of the case that whetted people’s appetites: For weeks, Bashara pleaded with the public to help find his wife’s killer, even as clouds of suspicion swirled around him. Bashara is charged with first-degree murder.
Days after Jane’s body was discovered, The Detroit News first reported Bashara had a girlfriend, Rachel Gillett, for whom he planned to buy a house. It was later revealed Bashara and Gillett were devotees of the bondage, discipline and sadomasochism lifestyle, and that Bashara held kinky parties in his dungeon beneath the Hard Luck Lounge, which he owned, near the border of Detroit and Grosse Pointe Park.
Bashara and Gillett sought other women to join them in a polygamous relationship, including Oregon resident Janet Leehmann, who testified during Bashara’s preliminary examination last year that he tried to woo her by mailing her a T-shirt he’d worn for three days, a leather collar — and two gift certificates to the Olive Garden restaurant chain.
Another woman, Lydia Porter, testified she lived in Bashara’s dungeon for a time, and that she often attended church with him and his family.
During the preliminary exam testimony of Gillett, Leehmann and Porter, Bashara licked his lips and made suggestive gestures with his eyeglasses, drawing the ire of 36th District Judge Kenneth King, who called the proceedings the most bizarre he’d ever seen.
Deteriorating marriage
Jane Bashara was a marketing executive who worked at DTE Energy for 24 years. At the time of her death, her marriage had been rapidly deteriorating, friends testified.
The man who drove a Lincoln Navigator with the vanity plate “Big Bobb” passed himself off as a wealthy real estate mogul, but court testimony revealed most of his rental properties were in his wife’s name. Many were in foreclosure.
During testimony, it was also revealed Jane was upset with her husband after he withdrew $10,000 from her 401(k) account without her permission. She then changed the passwords to her bank accounts so he couldn’t access them.
She also confided in friends that she was angry after their children caught Bob on several occasions watching BDSM pornography on his computer.
Bashara’s friends from the BDSM parties, where he was known as “Master Bob,” said he was angry with his wife because she wasn’t interested in kinky sex.
Despite the problems, Jane’s best friend, Patricia Matthews, said she wanted to keep the marriage together. But prosecutors say Bashara had other ideas.
20-year prison sentence
They contend he wanted Jane dead so he could pursue his dream of living in a house with a harem of submissive women. He made an offer to buy a house just blocks from his family home.
According to prosecutors and court testimony, Bashara asked several people if they knew anyone who would carry out a murder for hire. He eventually settled on Gentz, who had done odd jobs for him at his rental properties, prosecutors say.
Bashara exchanged dozens of phone calls with Gentz in the weeks leading up to the killing.
After Gentz was arrested for Jane’s murder, Bashara planned to have a hit man kill him in jail. He tried to hire a furniture store owner to carry out the hit, but the man wore a wire, and Bashara was recorded talking about trying to have Gentz killed.
Bashara was convicted in 2012 of solicitation of murder and sentenced to up to 20 years in prison.
Since then, the first-degree murder case has been marked by delays and surprises. The trial was originally set for March, but it got pushed back to allow attorneys more time to wade through a mountain of evidence.
Bashara has had several attorneys since he was first arrested. David Griem asked to be removed from the case because of an unspecified breakdown in the attorney-client relationship.
Mark Procida was appointed to defend Bashara, but he was removed from the case in February by Wayne Circuit Judge Vonda Evans.
Bashara wanted David Cripps and his wife, Gabi Silver, to defend him, and Cripps was appointed for a short time, but he withdrew because he said he had a conflict of interest.
Veteran attorney Lillian Diallo was then appointed to defend Bashara.
Difficult case?
The notoriety of the case could present difficulties, experts say.
“Because of the attention given to this case, it’s likely going to take several days to seat a jury,” said Wayne Circuit Judge Timothy Kenny, who met with the media last week to discuss the rules governing coverage of the case.
Dubin agreed the national interest in the case won’t make it easy to try.
“The system gets tested in these types of cases, where there’s so much publicity that seems to establish guilt,” Dubin said.
“The legal system needs to respond by making sure jurors are found who are able to keep their minds open and evaluate the evidence, which will be extraordinarily compelling to people who are fascinated by unusual stuff.”
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Wednesday, March 6, 2013

Ohio executes crime-rampage killer linked to Livonia murder


Columbus, Ohio — Ohio on Wednesday executed a man who fatally shot an adult bookstore security guard in 1994 at the end of a multistate crime rampage as witnesses of a second slaying victim of that rampage looked on intently.

Frederick Treesh received a single powerful dose of pentobarbital and was pronounced dead at 10:37 a.m. by Donald Morgan, warden of the Southern Ohio Correctional Facility in Lucasville.

Treesh was sentenced to die for killing Henry Dupree in Eastlake east of Cleveland on Aug. 27, 1994. He and a co-defendant were suspects in the shooting death three days earlier of Ghassan Danno, a Livonia, Mich., video store co-owner.

"This is where drugs lead you," Treesh, a former cocaine addict, said in a last statement.

He also apologized for the death of Dupree, but said he wouldn't say he was sorry to family members of Danno, who sat a few feet away watching through a window. Treesh said he'd never been charged or tried in that slaying.

After a few more comments Treesh said, "If you want me murdered, just say it."

Treesh, of Waterloo, Ind., was the 50th inmate put to death by the state since it resumed executions in 1999.

By Andrew Welsh-Huggins
From The Detroit News:

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Ex-postal worker charged in gift card thefts


A former postal worker in Romeo is accused of stealing and using gift cards from customers on her delivery route over the holidays, postal investigators said.

The United States Postal Service Office of Inspector General began investigating Cynthia Winters after customers complained of missing gift cards, according to a criminal complaint filed Monday in U.S. District Court. She is charged with theft of mail by a postal employee.

One man called the mail theft complaint hotline to report two $100 gift cards mailed Dec. 19 from his father's Ray Township home never reached the relative they were intended for. One from Target was redeemed four days later at a Shelby Township location.

By Mark Hicks
From The Detroit News:

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Murder or self-defense? Opposing pictures emerge grandmother's slaying trial


Pontiac — The trial of a 75-year-old West Bloomfield Township woman charged in the slaying of her teenage grandson opened Tuesday with dramatic recounting of his final minutes and the terror to which he allegedly subjected his grandmother for months.

But there was no disputing Sandra Layne, a retired school teacher charged with open murder in the May 2012 slaying of Jonathan Hoffman, 17, fired the fatal shots. Defense attorney Jerome Sabbota told jurors they will hear Layne testify what led to the shooting.

"She is no murderer … he was a troubled teen and she was in fear for her life," said Sabbota, who ticked off events that transformed his client into an accused killer.

"She was afraid because she had seen him tied up in the hospital," said Sabbota of one drug arrest and added Jonathan had also previously attacked his mother, Layne's daughter, during an argument police had to break up.

Then there was his escalating use of drugs: marijuana, mushrooms and K2 or Spice, a synthetic drug that had been linked to an April 2012 case involving another teen accused of attacking family members and beating his father to death with a baseball bat.

By Mike Martindale
From The Detroit News:

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Tuesday, March 5, 2013

Final minutes of teen's life described in trial of West Bloomfield grandmother

Pontiac — The trial of a 75-year-old West Bloomfield Township woman charged in the fatal shooting of her teenage grandson opened with jurors hearing dramatic descriptions of the final minutes of the victim's life from the prosecution and the terror to which he subjected his grandmother from the defense.

Sandra Layne has been jailed for nine months without bond awaiting trial in Oakland County Circuit Court on a charge of open murder in the May 2012 slaying of Jonathan Hoffman, 17, who suffered five gunshot wounds from a handgun purchased by Layne. Her attorney, Jerome Sabbota, contends Layne armed herself out of fear and the fatal shots were fired during a struggle for the gun. The struggle was recorded during a 911 call from Hoffman.

The pale, diminutive Layne bowed her head as Paul Walton, chief assistant Oakland County Prosecuting Attorney recalled Hoffman's last words for jurors.

By Mike Martindale
From The Detroit News:

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'I still got to fight out here': former Tuskegee Airman recounts carjacking

Former Tuskegee Airman recounts daytime carjacking in Detroit; 4 teens charged

Detroit — As he stared down the barrel of a nickel-plated pistol wielded by a teenage gunman demanding the keys to his Jeep, Jesse Rutledge said an odd thought entered his mind:

"I'm thinking, 'This kid is so little; how's he going to see over the steering wheel?'" said the 88-year-old former Tuskegee Airman, who flew missions in World War II.

That initial thought was replaced by fear, said Rutledge, who was carjacked by four youths as he left a barber shop near Harper and Van Dyke about 4 p.m. Saturday.

"Yeah, I was scared," said Rutledge, a former gunner on a B-25 bomber, shaking his head. "I'm 80-something years old and I still got to fight out here."

Police arrested the alleged robbers — ages 13, 14, 15 and 16 — the next day.

By George Hunter
From The Detroit News:

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Support, tips offered after Clinton Township boy's death

No arrests in hit and run; witnesses say red pickup hit Christopher Sandoval

A driver who fatally struck a 10-year-old boy on Detroit's east side Sunday then fled has not yet been found, and the youth's family is seeking answers as well as help for a funeral.

As of Monday night, the Detroit Police Department said no arrests were made in the death of Christopher Sandoval, who was hit in front of his home in the 16000 block of Bringard while taking trash to the curb.

Neighbors who saw the driver of the pickup — described as a red Dodge Ram from the early 2000s, possibly with a snow plow in the front and snow blowers in the back — continue to share tips with the Sandoval family.

They claim the man might have been spotted in the area before, said Lisa Sandoval, Christopher's mother.

By Mark Hicks
From The Detroit News:

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