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Updated: 10:31 AM May 27, 2010
Closing Arguments Underway in Biela Murder-Rape Case
Closing arguments are underway and jury deliberations are expected to follow in the James Biela rape and murder trial.
Posted: 5:29 PM May 26, 2010Reporter: SCOTT SONNER AP; KOLO 8 News Email Address: news@kolotv.com |
Spectators gather in courtroom one Wednesday May 26, 2010 for the closing arguments in the James Biela murder trial. There was no more room in Judge Perry's courtroom so a viedo feed was put in Judge Janet Berry's courtroom for the over flow. Marilyn Newton/RGJ
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Follow our live coverage of the trial here
Update:
Closing arguments are underway and jury deliberations are expected to follow in the James Biela rape and murder trial.
The prosecution has finished its closing arguments, and now it’s time to hear from the defense.
At about noon Wednesday, the prosecution finished its closing arguments in Washoe District Court. Deputy District Attorney Elliott Sattler told the jury 13 days of evidence and testimony points to "one inescapable conclusion: James Michael Biela is a kidnapper, a rapist and a murderer."
Just before 10:00 am, Judge Robert Perry began giving the jury instructions, preparing them for their deliberations, and telling them that their ultimate duty as jurors is to follow the law as stated, and to consider all evidence using reason, common sense and experience.
Jury instruction ended just before 10:30 am.
Biela’s mother, stepfather, and several other family members were present in the courtroom.
The jury is expected to begin deliberations in James Biela's rape and murder trial Wednesday after his public defenders abruptly ended presentation of their case with the calling of only one expert witness about DNA evidence.
The judge said he anticipates the case going to the jury sometime Wednesday afternoon following closing arguments from both sides in the trial that began 12 days ago.
"Sooner than I thought we are done with the evidence in the first part of this case," Washoe District Judge Robert Perry said before sending the jury home for the day about 11:30 a.m. on Tuesday.
Biela, 28, a pipe fitter and ex-Marine, told the judge earlier Tuesday he wanted to testify but decided against it on the advice of his attorneys. He's accused of raping and murdering 19-year-old Brianna Denison and sexually assaulting two other young women in a string of attacks from October 2007 to January 2008 on the edge of the campus of the University of Nevada, Reno. He also faces a kidnapping charge.
If found guilty, a second phase of the trial will begin with the same jury determining whether Biela should be sentenced to death.
Denison, a Reno High graduate, was on winter break from Santa Barbara City College when she was abducted while sleeping on a
friend's couch near the UNR campus on Jan. 20, 2008.
Her body clad only in socks was found about three weeks later beneath a discarded Christmas tree in a vacant lot across the street from the workplace of Biela's ex-girlfriend and mother of his child.
Prosecutors contend Biela is a serial rapist who was motivated in part by a fetish for women's thong underwear and eventually graduated to murder.
They spent nearly two weeks calling witnesses and presenting evidence, including DNA tests they say conclusively connect Biela to both the scene of the kidnapping and the site where Denison's body was dumped along with two pair of women's thong underwear - one belonging to the friend at the home where she was staying.
Biela had refused to provide detectives with his DNA, but his ex-girlfriend allowed them to take samples from their son, which were used to make what prosecutors say is a conclusive match.
She also testified on Tuesday she found two pair of women's thong underwear in Biela's truck during a search spurred by suspicions he was having an affair.
The lone defense witness was Roger Miller, a DNA expert with a private lab in Phoenix, Ariz.
He testified late Monday and again Tuesday that it was not possible for his lab to conduct a second test on some samples to confirm the results of Washoe County's crime lab because all of the samples had been consumed by the county tests.
Miller said that while the initial results were consistent with those that would tie Biela to the scene, he would not characterize them as a "match." Under cross examination, he acknowledged he did not dispute the lab's methods or the results it came up with.
The day began with the jury outside the courtroom when Perry asked Biela if he intended to testify on his own behalf.
Biela initially said, "Yes."
But after the judge questioned him on his knowledge of his rights and asked if he had made an educated decision based in part on the advice of his attorneys, Biela answered, "I guess so."
Pressed by the judge about whether he still wanted to testify, Biela said, "I guess not."
"I just want to say I would like to (testify), I just was advised not to. So I'll follow their advice not to do it," he said.
Perry said he thought the jurors would be fresher if they returned Wednesday for deliberations, rather than beginning that process late Tuesday after he completed the jury instructions.
"I once remember getting a verdict at 3 in the morning and nobody knew their name by that time," Perry said.
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