By City News Service, on January 23, 2012, at 3:30 pm
A jury was seated and testimony began today in the trial of a Lake Elsinore man who allegedly killed his wife because she was divorcing him and then tried to torch her remains.
Roberto Gallardo Aguilar could face 25 years to life in prison if convicted in the May 22, 2009, death of 22-year-old Sharon Elizabeth Contreras.
Along with first-degree murder, Aguilar is charged with felony witness intimidation.
After two days of jury selection before Riverside County Superior Court Judge Albert Wojcik, 14 jurors — including two alternates — were selected.
Aguilar remains jailed in lieu of $1 million bail at the Southwest Detention Center in Murrieta.
According to a trial brief filed by Deputy District Attorney Chris Peuvrelle, Aguilar, now 29, and Contreras were in the midst of a divorce when she was killed.
Witnesses told sheriff’s investigators that Aguilar stated on several occasions that “he would rather see Sharon dead than with someone else,” according to the brief.
Aguilar also allegedly bragged to a friend that he had abused Contreras, stabbing her in the stomach with a knife and inflicting other wounds, according to court papers.
In the seven months before her death, the victim received medical treatment for unexplained injuries on multiple occasions, but never blamed Aguilar, according to the prosecution.
The couple, who had a son together, separated about a month before Contreras was killed, after she served him with divorce papers.
Around 1:45 on the morning of the murder, the defendant left his job at a Garden Grove club without saying where he was going, Peuvrelle said.
According to the prosecutor, Aguilar drove to Lake Elsinore, where Contreras was living in her father’s house on Amorose Drive. Peuvrelle alleged that during a confrontation, the defendant smothered his wife.
The defendant allegedly took the body to a deserted area near Temescal Canyon and Jeff roads and set it aflame. Passing motorists thought there was a small brush fire and called 911, leading to the discovery of Contreras’ partially burned remains.
Four days later, Aguilar allegedly told a friend, Luis Sandoval, that he had gotten into a fight with Contreras and she was ‘La chinge,” which roughly translated from Spanish means “I (expletive) her up.”
The defendant reported his wife missing to Garden Grove police, telling an investigator that he and the victim had gotten into an argument over $50, and she ran away with a blanket, taking nothing else with her, according to the prosecution.
During a later interview with a Riverside County sheriff’s detective, Aguilar acknowledged that he had told Sandoval that he had killed Contreras, but didn’t mean what he said, Peuvrelle alleged.
According to the brief, cell phone records confirmed the defendant was in Lake Elsinore immediately before and after Contreras’ death.
The witness intimidation charge stemmed from an alleged note Aguilar left on Sandoval’s car, advising him not to talk to police.
A compilation of daily news articles from around the United States about deaths (including both people and animals) that appear to occur in the context of a past or present intimate relationship, focusing on 2009-present. (NOTE: this blog is limited to incidents that appear in the media and are captured by our search terms. We recognize this is not an exhaustive portrayal of all deaths resulting from intimate violence.) When is society going to realize intimate violence makes victims of us all?
No comments:
Post a Comment