DA considers death penalty
By Jessica Musicar, Staff Writer
Wednesday, November 18, 2009 |
COQUILLE — The Coos County District Attorney may seek the death penalty or life imprisonment for Patrick Lee Horath, if the Fairview man is convicted in the murder of his sister-in-law, Jayme Austin.
“By trial, I will have made up my mind,” said District Attorney R. Paul Frasier.
For now, it’s “too early in the case to tell,” the DA said. First, he wants to see the results of a planned background investigation analyzing the 45-year-old’s character.
On Monday afternoon, Judge Michael Gillespie arraigned Horath in Coos County Court on a grand jury indictment, charging him with five counts of murder and one count first-degree sexual abuse, stemming from the Nov. 9 death of 31-year-old Austin.
Although the courtroom was filled with Austin’s friends and family, including Horath’s wife and Austin’s sister, Alyssa, he made no attempt to steal glances at them as he stood in shackles and a baggy black and white-striped jail uniform.
The DA said the family has had a double loss in this case, as Austin’s two young daughters lost a mother, and Horath and Alyssa Horath’s children may lose a father.
“They’ve been hit with a double whammy,” he said.
Investigators believe Horath strangled Austin in the bathroom of her mother’s home on the ninth and then hid her body under a mound of rocks and dirt up Middle Creek Road. Coos County Sheriff’s deputies arrested Horath at the Oregon State Police Empire Office on Thursday following a more than six-hour long interview. Frasier said Horath led investigators to the gravesite at the bottom of a steep embankment about 50 feet from the U.S. Bureau of Land Management road. It is unclear whether he took investigators to the site or gave directions.
Horath, Austin’s mother and other relatives live in houses on the family ranch in Fairview. Austin lived there, too.
The charges against Horath include two counts of aggravated murder and three counts of murder. Frasier explained that the five murder charges represent different legal theories of how murder could have been committed. He said he asked Monday’s grand jury to charge Horath on each.
The aggravated murder charges allege the defendant intended to kill Austin while sexually abusing or attempting to abuse her. The remaining three murder charges allege he accidentally caused her death while sexually abusing or attempting to abuse her.
Frasier refused to say which charge he found most likely.
“I can’t talk about that,” he said.
He did note that there were indications that someone tried to clean the bathroom where Austin likely died.
The DA said he chose to pursue the sex abuse charge, because an autopsy on Saturday showed physical signs that Austin had been molested in some way.
If convicted of aggravated murder, Horath could face the death penalty, life without parole or life with the possibility of parole after serving 30 years. For murder, sentencing would likely be life imprisonment with 25 years mandatory minimum. First-degree sexual abuse is a Measure 11 crime punishable by up to 10 years in prison or a minimum of six years and three months. If the case goes to trial and Horath is found guilty of two or more, those murder charges would merge and the court would impose only one sentence, the DA added.
The last time a Coos County district attorney pursued the death penalty, Frasier said, was in the Girly Crumb case in 1997. The jury couldn’t agree on executing him, and the court sentenced Crumb to life without parole in the quintuple murder case.
The judge assigned Dan Koenig, a public defense attorney based in Eugene who participated in the arraignment via teleconference, to represent Horath from this point forward. In cases that could involve the death penalty, Frasier said courts draw from a pool of death penalty qualified defense attorneys.
Tags »
Embed This Article
Feel free to embed this article onto your website by copying the
code below and pasting it into your site's HTML.
The comments below are from users of theworldlink.com and do not necessarily represent the views of The World or Lee Enterprises. Participation Guidelines
Note: There is a maximum of 200 words per comment. If you wish to post more, please visit our forum.
Not already registered?
The World welcomes your comments about stories, and we encourage a robust dialogue on this site. All comments must meet reasonable standards of decency and civility.
Please follow these basic rules:
- No defamatory comments about individuals or businesses.
- No deliberately false information.
- No obscenity or racially offensive language.
- No harassment, verbal abuse, threats or personal attacks.
- No information that invades another person's privacy.
- No business solicitations or charitable solicitations.
Comments that violate these standards will not be posted. Users with repeated violations may be banned from future posting.Comments will be approved throughout the day during business hours. After hours and weekend comments may not appear until the following business day. It may take a couple of hours before comments are approved.
The World generally does not edit comments, but we reserve the right to edit any comment that does not meet our standards.
Close Guidelines