Joseph James DeAngelo Jr. is suspected of raping some 50
women and holding entire families hostage during a reign of terror in
Sacramento and the Bay Area in the late 1970s, then progressing to murder, reported the Los Angeles Times.
The killer was given various names in each region, including
the Visalia Ransacker, East Area Rapist, Creek Bed Killer and Original Night
Stalker, before becoming known as the Golden State Killer.
He was arrested at his home in the Sacramento suburbs on
April 24, 2018, just days after DNA samples surreptitiously gathered from him
by law enforcement linked him to some of the crimes.
District attorneys met in a Sacramento office Wednesday to
vote on whether to seek the death penalty if DeAngelo is convicted in any of
the 13 serial murders he is charged with. The decision in favor was unanimous,
said Orange County Dist. Atty. Todd Spitzer, in whose county DeAngelo is
accused of killing four people in the early 1980s.
Prosecutors in Santa Barbara, Ventura and Sacramento
counties — with eight murder cases among them — agreed.
DeAngelo also is charged with killing a Tulare County
journalism professor, but the county has not added special circumstances
charges that would allow the death penalty in that case. He also is charged
with kidnapping in several Contra Costa County rapes.
The capital punishment decision is strategic as much as
anything. The letter prosecutors sent Wednesday to DeAngelo’s public defender
notes that they would reconsider a lesser punishment if the defense provides
sufficient reason. Spitzer declined to comment on what prosecutors would
consider sufficient, but in death-penalty cases that typically includes a
confession, especially to crimes not yet charged.
Ron Harrington, brother of 1980 murder victim Keith
Harrington, said he was pleased to hear prosecutors will seek the death
penalty.
“The Golden State Killer is the worst of the worst of the
worst that ever happened,” Harrington said outside the Sacramento jail
courtroom where DeAngelo appeared for Wednesday’s brief hearing. “We are
thrilled with the decision to seek the death penalty.” Harrington followed with
a criticism of Gov. Gavin Newsom, who has put executions on hold after years of
an unofficial freeze.
But another murder victim’s relative at Wednesday’s hearing
said she does not support the death penalty.
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