Jodi Arias reacts during reading of verdict May 8, 2013
PHOENIX, ARIZONA — An Arizona jury
found Jodi Arias guilty on Wednesday of first-degree murder in the death of her
ex-boyfriend in a capital trial that riveted America for months with graphic
sexual evidence and bizarre testimony.
Arias, who could face the death penalty as her case goes into the penalty phase
of the trial on Thursday, has admitted to shooting 30-year-old Travis
Alexander, whose body was found in the shower of his Phoenix valley home in
June 2008. He had been shot in the face, stabbed 27 times and his throat had
been slashed.
Arias, 32, had tried unsuccessfully to convince the jury that she acted in
self-defense after Alexander attacked her because she had dropped his camera
while taking photos of him in the shower.
She teared up as the jury's decision was read, while a crowd of hundreds
erupted into cheers outside the court. Jurors could have convicted Arias of a
lesser crime such as second-degree murder or manslaughter, but instead found
her guilty of the most serious charge possible.
"Five long years ... of lying, manipulating. Now the citizens of Arizona
have spoken,'' Dave Hall, a friend of Alexander, told reporters as he left the
court. He said a death sentence would be appropriate.
"If what she did to Travis does not justify the death penalty in America
today, then what do we have one for?''
The trial, which was punctuated by graphic testimony and evidence including a
sex tape, captivated a nation enthralled by the story of an attractive and
soft-spoken young woman charged with such a brutal crime.
The case, which began in early January and was streamed live on the Internet,
drew parallels with the similarly high-profile Florida murder trial of Casey
Anthony, another young woman charged with an unthinkable crime. She was
ultimately acquitted in 2011 in the death of her toddler daughter, Caylee.
In the Arizona case, jurors heard how the petite, dark-haired Arias met and
began dating Alexander, a businessman and motivational speaker, in 2006. During
18 days of often salacious testimony, Arias said she and Alexander continued to
have sex despite their break-up from a relationship marked by emotional and
physical abuse.
Arias said Alexander had made her feel "like a prostitute'' and that he
kicked and attempted to choke her, although she admitted never reporting the
alleged abuse to the police, seeking medical treatment or documenting it in her
journal.
Described as
manipulative
Defense attorney Kirk Nurmi argued that Arias had snapped in the "sudden
heat of passion'' in the moments between a final photograph she took showing
Alexander alive and taking a shower and a subsequent picture showing him
covered in his own blood.
But prosecutor Juan Martinez painted a different picture of Arias, portraying
her as manipulative and prone to jealousy in previous relationships, and said
she had meticulously planned to kill Alexander.
"Nothing indicates that this is anything less than a slaughter,'' he told
jurors in his summing up on Friday, asking them to return a verdict of felony
first-degree murder.
An attorney for Alexander's siblings, Jason Beckstead, said the family was
pleased with the verdict and that his law firm planned to file a wrongful death
lawsuit against Arias "in the very near future.'' He would not stipulate
damages sought.
At the sentencing trial beginning on Thursday, the prosecution will present
evidence to prove beyond a reasonable doubt that aggravating factors exist that
call for the death penalty. The defense can also present rebuttal evidence.
Jurors will then determine if the aggravating circumstances were proved to
exist beyond a reasonable doubt.
In making his case for premeditated murder, Martinez had accused Arias of
bringing the pistol used in the killing, which has not been recovered, with her
from California. He said she also rented a car, removed its license plate and
bought gasoline cans and fuel to conceal her journey to the Phoenix suburbs to
kill Alexander.
Martinez said Arias lied after the killing to deflect any suspicion that she
had been involved in his death, leaving a voicemail on Alexander's cellphone,
sending irises to his grandmother and telling detectives she was not at the
crime scene before changing her story.
The jury, which reached a verdict on its third full day of deliberations, had
grilled her on her claims that her mind went blank after she shot Alexander,
and wanted to know why she had not called emergency responders - questions she
struggled to answer.
The defense called a psychologist who testified that Arias' memory lapses
stemmed from post-traumatic stress as a result of Alexander's alleged abuse and
the killing itself - claims disputed by prosecutors.
In closing arguments, Martinez told the jury Alexander had sent an instant
message weeks before his death saying he was "extremely afraid'' of Arias
because of her "stalking behavior.''
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