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Brooke
Marie ROTTIERS
Robbery - Torture
By Yazmin Alvarez - Swrnn.com
October 22, 2010
An ex-prostitute was sentenced to death today
for killing two men during a robbery, in what a judge described as
a “cold, callous, brutal and particularly cruel” crime.
Brooke Marie Rottiers, 30, of Corona, was
convicted June 23 of two counts of first-degree murder in the
slayings of 22-year Marvin Gabriel and 28-year-old Milton Chavez.
Jurors also found true a special circumstance
allegation that the Aug. 28, 2006, killings were committed during
the course of a robbery.
The same jury recommended that Rottiers be
executed for the killings — a recommendation that Riverside County
Superior Court Judge Helios J. Hernandez affirmed today.
“The defendant’s conduct … included beating,
hitting, stomping, hog-tying and asphyxiation,” Hernandez said.
“Her actions were cold, callous, brutal and particularly cruel.
She went well beyond the minimum necessary to rob and cover her
tracks.”
Defense attorney Chris Jensen sought a life
term for his client. He argued that the sexual abuse she suffered
as a child and her long battle with drug addiction — as well as
the needs of her four young children, who are in the custody of
family members — weighed against a death sentence.
Hernandez disagreed, saying Rottiers
“understood the criminality of her conduct” and “was thinking
clearly and purposefully.”
Rottiers’ co-defendants, Omar Tyree Hutchinson,
34, and Franchune Dyuel Epps, 26, were convicted by separate
juries of the same charges. Epps was sentenced to life in prison
without parole, and Hernandez is expected to impose the same
sentence on Hutchinson on Wednesday.
The District Attorney’s Office sought capital
punishment for Rottiers because she masterminded the murders.
According to Deputy District Attorney Sean
Lafferty, Chavez and Gabriel met Rottiers and Epps while drinking
after work at a Highgrove bar.
Rottiers led the day laborers to believe she
would have sex for money and had them follow her and Epps back to
the National Inn in Corona, where Rottiers lived with Hutchinson,
a small-time drug dealer, Lafferty said.
Once inside the motel room, Epps pulled a gun
and held it on the victims while Rottiers and Hutchinson stripped
them and stole their money and valuables, the prosecutor said.
Rottiers, who is 6 feet tall and weighs 200
pounds, beat the 5-foot-2 Chavez, then bound him and Gabriel with
electrical cords, phone cords, bras and panties, according to
Lafferty.
The defendant, known as “Crazy,” gagged the men
with anything she could get her hands on, according to trial
testimony.
“The victims had panties and other cloth items
stuffed in their mouths,” the judge said. “Their mouths and noses
were covered and taped over.
They were hog-tied with cords around their
necks to their hands, which were behind their backs and to their
ankles. They asked for mercy. Instead of mercy, she let them
suffocate to death while she and her co-defendants ingested
drugs.”
Their bodies were wrapped in bed sheets and
loaded into the trunk of a car that Rottiers drove to Gavilan
Hills — a remote area near Lake Matthews — and abandoned on a dirt
road. The car and the men’s remains were found the next day by a
resident.
MyValleyNews.com
July 15, 2010
RIVERSIDE - A jury today recommended a death
sentence for a sometime-prostitute who robbed, beat and suffocated
two men she lured to her motel room on the pretext of sex.
Brooke Marie Rottiers, 30, of Corona, was
convicted June 23 of two counts of first-degree murder and special
circumstance allegations that the crimes were committed during the
course of a robbery.
The same jury spent 4 1/2 days deliberating in
the penalty phase of the defendant's trial before returning with
its recommendation that Rottiers be executed.
Formal sentencing is set for Sept. 17.
Rottiers' attorney, Chris Jensen, plans to ask
Riverside County Superior Court Judge Helios J. Hernandez to
reduce his client's sentence to life in prison without the
possibility of parole.
Judges have the discretion to modify a jury's
verdict, but rarely do so.
Rottiers' co-defendants, Omar Tyree Hutchinson,
34, and Franchune Dyuel Epps, 26, were convicted of the same
charges and are facing life prison terms when they're sentenced by
Hernandez -- Hutchinson on Aug. 16 and Epps on Aug. 17.
Witnesses for the defense described Rottiers as
an attentive mother who loved her four children, but battled drug
abuse.
The District Attorney's Office sought capital
punishment for the defendant because she masterminded the murders
of 22-year Marvin Gabriel and 28-year-old Milton Chavez on Aug.
28, 2006, according to prosecutor Sean Lafferty.
The day laborers met Rottiers and Epps while
drinking after work at a Highgrove bar.
Rottiers led the men to believe she would
provide sex for cash and had them follow her and Epps back to the
National Inn in Corona, where Rottiers lived with Hutchinson, a
small-time drug dealer, according to Lafferty.
Once inside the motel room, Epps pulled a gun
and held it on the victims while Rottiers and Hutchinson stripped
them and stole their money and valuables, the prosecutor said.
Rottiers, who stands nearly 6 feet tall and
weighs 200 pounds, beat the 5-foot-2 Chavez, then bound him and
Gabriel with electrical cords, phone cords, bras and panties,
according to Lafferty.
The defendant, known as "Crazy," suffocated the
men, stuffing underpants down their throats and taping plastic
bags over their heads, the prosecutor said.
The defendants also beat the men over the head
with a blunt instrument, he said.
Their bodies were wrapped in bed sheets, loaded
into the trunk of a car that Rottiers drove to Gavilan Hills, a
remote area near Lake Matthews, and left beside a dirt road, where
they were discovered by a resident the next day.
June
30, 2010
Three separate juries have convicted a
prostitute, her boyfriend and another woman who lured two men to a
Corona motel room where they were robbed and killed.
Jurors, all hearing evidence in the same case, found Brooke Marie
Rottiers, Omar Tyree Hutchinson and Franchune Dyuel Epps guilty of
murder and a special circumstance of robbery. The verdicts were
read Friday.
The penalty phase for Rottiers began Tuesday.
Jurors will determine if she should face a death sentence. Epps
and Hutchinson both face life in prison without parole.
The trio was convicted of killing Marvin Gabriel, 22, and Milton
Chavez, 28, two Riverside day laborers whose decomposing bodies
were found by Riverside County sheriff's deputies hogtied with
electrical cords and bright-pink duct tape. The men were gagged
with panties and found with plastic bags around their neck with
bras and cords, according to court records.
Authorities found the bodies when inspecting an
abandoned Honda Accord left in the Gavilan Hills area in August
2006, near Lake Mathews in Riverside County.
Prosecutors said two men went to the El Paraiso
bar in Riverside the night of the killing. Cell phone records show
Rottiers, now 30, who was working as a prostitute, was in the same
area with Epps, 26.
The two men and the defendants then went to a
Corona motel. Epps was accused of pulling a gun as Rottiers
ordered Hutchinson to strip them down and rob them.
Rottiers believed she may have killed one of
the men accidentally, Deputy District Attorney Sean Lafferty said.
Rottiers then beat the two men and strangled
them.
Hutchinson's attorney, Ryan Markson said
Hutchinson admitted to helping her dispose of the bodies but
denied taking part in the robbery.
A motel guest told detectives Rottiers, who
went by the nickname "Kraizie" described how the men were
strangled and smothered with pillowcases as they suffered.
Rottiers, who was arguing with Hutchinson about borrowing a car,
said she was worried about police finding her DNA. In the room,
police found the same pink duct tape used to tape a plastic bag
over one man's head after a wash cloth was shoved down his throat.
"It's horrific. It's one of the most disturbing
murders I've seen", Lafferty said. "It's not an instantaneous
death. It's a very personal brutal, intimate way to kill
somebody".
A. The People's Case
In
the afternoon on August 29, 2006, a car was discovered next to the
road in an isolated area near Lake Matthews. When investigators
from the Riverside County Sheriff's Department's Central Homicide
Unit arrived at the scene, they discovered the bodies of two men,
who were later identified as Gabriel and Chavez. A washcloth was
found stuffed in Gabriel's mouth, duct tape covered his mouth, a
belt had been wrapped around his face, and plastic bags also had
been wrapped around his face and neck. A telephone cord had been
wrapped around both his wrists, and a black bra had been wrapped
around that telephone cord. Gabriel had been hogtied; an
electrical cord was found around the wrist bindings and between
the wrists and the ankles.
Electrical cords had
been wrapped around Chavez's ankles, and a leather belt had been
wrapped around his chin and the back of his neck. Over that,
another leather belt, a pair of panties, and two pieces of
telephone cord also had been wrapped around Chavez's neck.
Mark McCormick, M.D., a forensic pathologist for the Riverside
County coroner's office, testified that Gabriel and Chavez both
died from asphyxiation.
2. Crime scene and
investigation
Investigators learned from the
manager of the National Inn in Corona that he had recently evicted
two people, Rottiers and Hutchinson, from room 114 after the
cleaning crew informed him that blankets and sheets were missing
and the power cords had been removed from two motel vacuum
cleaners. The manager testified that on August 28, 2006, between
8:00 and 8:30 a.m., Rottiers borrowed the motel dolly to move some
items out of room 114, and a car had been backed into the garage.
Scott Williams testified that on August 29, 2006, he was released
from prison on parole and was picked up by Christy Day, the mother
of his son and a recovering methamphetamine and heroin addict. Day
took Williams to the National Inn where she lived. Williams
indicated at trial that the National Inn was a "[k]ind of rough
motel" where other parolees stayed and prostitution and drug use
occurred. Williams also indicated he knew Rottiers and Hutchinson.
The manager showed Williams room 114. The room had been stripped
of bed linens. Two homicide detectives came to the door while
Williams was in the room.
Detective Jesse
Martinez, a homicide investigator at the Riverside County
Sheriff's Department, testified that on August 29, 2006, he was
assigned to assist Senior Investigator Robert Masson (Detective
Masson) and Investigator John Powers in investigating this case.
Detective Martinez testified that when he, Detective Masson, and
another investigator arrived at the National Inn that day, the
manager told them he was in the process of renting room 114 to
Williams and Day. When the investigators entered room 114, they
encountered Williams.
Day testified and
identified Rottiers in the courtroom, indicating she had met
Rottiers at the National Inn. Rottiers lived in room 114 in August
2006 and was in a romantic relationship with Hutchinson. Day also
identified Hutchinson in the courtroom, stating she had purchased
methamphetamine from him. Day denied knowing that Hutchinson was
Rottiers's pimp, but, when asked about Rottiers's role as a
prostitute, Day testified that Rottiers told her she would rob her
customers instead of "doing the date."
Day
testified that on August 27, 2006, at around 10:00 p.m., she went
to Rottiers's room to look for Day's daughter. When Rottiers
answered the door, Day saw two Hispanic men in the room with
Rottiers. One of the men was taller than Day, who is five feet
seven inches tall.
Day also testified that in
the early morning hours of August 29, 2006, Rottiers came to her
room, woke her up, and told her she did something she was not
proud of. Rottiers said she had picked up two men in Riverside and
had brought them back to her room to "do a date," and Hutchinson
came into the room and caught her having sex with one of them.
Rottiers told Day that Hutchinson said something like, "You say
you're so bad, let's see what you got" or "Let's see what you're
going to do now." Rottiers also told Day she ended up strangling
the two men with her hands, bras, and panties, and that she "kind
of liked it." Rottiers told Day that she hit the men with her
knuckles when they started to smell, and she showed Day her
bruised and swollen knuckles. Rottiers also told Day she put the
men's bodies in a car along with all the bedding from the room,
drove out to Lake Matthews, and tried to light the car on fire,
but a second car got stuck and "they"3 had to leave before she was
able to burn the car.
According to Day, Rottiers
came back to Day's room at National Inn a few days later and was
talking loudly with Hutchinson on a Nextel phone. Day overheard
Rottiers say something about DNA, that Hutchinson was being
"weak," and that she would do the same thing to him as she did to
"those two mother fuckers" she had killed. At that point, the
manager came to the room and told Rottiers to leave.
Richard Stornetta testified that he and Williams were released
from prison at the same time, and Day picked them up and took them
to the National Inn. Stornetta went with Williams to look at room
114, which Stornetta described as torn up and "stripped." A woman
nicknamed "Crazy," whom Williams identified at trial as Rottiers,
came to Day's room. Stornetta heard Rottiers talking on the phone
with someone, yelling at that person and calling that person a
"weak piece of shit" who could not even help her "pick up one of
'em." Rottiers talked about her DNA being all over the room and
said something about a dolly cart. At that point Williams asked
Rottiers to leave.
Yvette Meek, a recovering
drug addict, testified she knew Rottiers and Hutchinson in 2006.
Meek stated that Rottiers told her she would pick up guys
pretending to be a prostitute, and then she would rob them without
going through with the sexual act.
3.
Forensic evidence
Megan Mannion-Gray, a
criminalist at the California Department of Justice's Jan
Banshinski Laboratory and Bureau of Forensic Services, testified
about DNA testing on evidence taken from the victims. Epps, who is
an African-American, was excluded as a DNA donor on 15 items
compared by the lab. Regarding a swab taken from one item of
evidence as to which Epps could not be excluded as a DNA donor,
there was a 33 percent chance that a randomly selected
African-American could have been the donor. Regarding another swab
as to which Epps could not be excluded as a DNA donor, there was
more than a 50 percent chance that a randomly selected
African-American could have been the donor. Rottiers could not be
excluded as a contributor of DNA discovered on an electrical cord,
but Epps could be excluded. Rottiers could not be excluded as a
contributor of DNA found in fingernail clippings taken from
Gabriel, but Epps could be excluded. Rottiers also could not be
excluded as a contributor of DNA discovered on a belt, but Epps
could be excluded.
4. Phone records
A radio frequency engineer working for Ericsson under contract for
Sprint Nextel, provided expert testimony regarding phone records
obtained from Sprint in this case. He indicated that the timing,
duration, and locations of cell phone calls can be determined from
phone records and cell tower locations.
Authenticated Sprint Nextel cell phone records for Epps, Rottiers,
and Hutchinson were presented to the jury. The phone records
showed direct connect communications made on August 27, 2006, from
Epps's phone to one belonging to Rottiers that carried the billing
of "Krazie Hutchinson." A total of four such phone connections
were recorded between 9:46 p.m. and 10:18 p.m. on August 27. A
fifth connection between those two phones was recorded early the
next morning, August 28, at 2:22 a.m.
The phone
records also showed a direct connect communication made from
Rottiers' phone to Epps's phone at 10:15 p.m. on August 27, 2006.
Later that night, at 11:23 p.m., a direct connect communication
was made between Epps's phone and Hutchinson's phone. The next
day, August 28 at 12:15 p.m., a connection was also made from
Epps's phone to Hutchinson's phone.
5. Epps's
May 15, 2007 statements to Detectives Masson and Martinez
On May 15, 2007, Epps gave a statement to Detectives Masson and
Martinez, a transcript of which was admitted into evidence. Epps
indicated she knew Rottiers through a mutual boyfriend, Brandon
Evans, who had been Epps's boyfriend two or three years earlier.
Epps knew that Rottiers's nickname was "Crazy" and Rottiers's
current boyfriend, Hutchinson, was Rottiers's pimp. She claimed
she went to the National Inn in Corona at around 2:00 a.m. to buy
drugs from Hutchinson, and she was high on drugs at the time. She
stated that when she arrived at the motel room, she saw Rottiers,
Hutchinson, and Rottiers's twin daughters. She described the room
as "junky," with phone cords ripped from the wall, vacuum cleaners
with cords ripped out, and a phone on the bed with no cord.
Epps stated that Rottiers and Hutchinson were arguing when she
entered the room. Rottiers told Hutchinson he was stupid and
careless, and Hutchinson called Rottiers a "stupid bitch." Epps
told the detectives Hutchinson said, "Oh, shit, the blanket," and
Rottiers threw a blanket on the floor as if she were hiding
something. Epps said she did not know what was under the blanket,
but it was something "kind of lumpy," and an investigator later
told her the "lumps" were bodies.
Epps asked,
"Am I being recorded?" When Detective Masson assured her that she
was not being recorded, but that Detective Martinez was taking
notes for a report, Epps provided additional details about the
homicides. She stated that she saw Rottiers and Hutchinson
wrapping up the bodies in blankets, and she helped them move one
the bodies to the trunk of the car Rottiers was driving. Epps said
that to get the body into the trunk, she lifted one side of the
blanket and Rottiers lifted the other. Rottiers and Hutchinson
moved the second body to the trunk of the car after Rottiers asked
the motel manager for a dolly. Hutchinson left after the second
body was put in the car. Epps stated she helped Rottiers vacate
the motel room and move to the Flaming Arrow motel.
Epps told the detectives she left Rottiers at the Flaming Arrow,
but later saw her driving around town as Epps was driving down the
street with the bodies in the trunk. Rottiers told her she needed
to drop the car off, and Epps led her to the Lake Matthews area
where she showed Rottiers an open space where she could leave the
car. Rottiers pulled off the road, left the engine running as if
the car had been abandoned, and then hopped out of the car and let
it roll. Epps said she got out of her car and cursed at Rottiers
for leaving the engine running, and then they got into Epps's car.
Epps started driving Rottiers back to her motel room. However,
following Rottiers's directions, Epps drove the car into sand and
she had to call for a tow truck to pull it out. Epps left Rottiers
by the side of the road and drove home.
When pressed, Epps told the detectives that Rottiers killed the
two men by smothering them by stepping on their faces with her
bare feet after they were tied up. Epps stated she was sitting in
the room when it happened, and Rottiers killed the larger man
first. She claimed she did not know how the other man died; she
looked over and he was not moving or breathing. Epps then said
Rottiers smothered the smaller man first. She claimed she went
there because Rottiers "chirped" her that Hutchinson had "chronic"
(drugs) for her.
Contrary to her earlier version
of the facts, Epps then told the detectives that the two men were
still dressed when she arrived at the motel room, and both
undressed when Rottiers told them to do so. The men thought they
were about to have sex. Rottiers began hitting them with
Hutchinson's belt. Rottiers punched the smaller man and knocked
him out. The larger man was covering his private parts with his
hands when Hutchinson hit him and knocked him to the floor.
Rottiers then tied up both men using cords from the phone and
vacuum cleaners. Rottiers then killed both men, the smaller man
first, with Rottiers's daughters still in the room. Epps again
stated that Rottiers killed the larger man by stepping on his face
and smothering him, but also stated she did not know how the
smaller man died.
Epps told the detectives she pulled her car into the motel just as
Rottiers and the two men were getting out of their car. Rottiers
and the two men entered the motel room about 30 seconds before
Epps entered the room. Hutchinson was already in the room with
Rottiers's daughters.
Epps stated she "might
have handed [Rottiers] the phone cord." She said she knew the cord
was not hooked up to the wall phone because the cord was by her
leg and she grabbed it. Epps said she "probably tried to give [the
cord] to her and it didn't go, so she snatched [it]." Epps
admitted she pulled the cord from the wall. She then said Rottiers
"ripped it out of the wall." She said she watched Rottiers rip the
cord out of the vacuum cleaner. Epps denied handing Rottiers any
duct tape.
6. Epps's June 14, 2007 statements
to the district attorney
On June 14, 2007,
Epps was interviewed by District Attorney Senior Investigator Tom
Dove and Deputy District Attorney John Molloy. A transcript of the
interview was admitted into evidence.
Epps
stated she met Hutchinson a month or two before August 2006. She
bought drugs from him. Epps had known Rottiers since about 2003.
She met Rottiers through Epps's former boyfriend, Evans.
According to Epps, she went to the National Inn on the day of the
incident to buy drugs from Hutchinson. When she arrived, six
people were in the room: Rottiers, Rottiers's two daughters, who
were asleep on the bed, Hutchinson, and "two Mexican guys," who
were lying naked on the floor. Epps stated that Rottiers and
Hutchinson were arguing about something, and she (Epps) was "so
high" on drugs at the time she could not remember what they were
arguing about and she could not remember whether the two men were
tied up. She recalled that Rottiers, who was barefooted, walked
over to the smaller man, who was praying, and stepped on his nose
and mouth. Hutchinson was standing over the man, who started
kicking, and told him not to move. The man's face turned purple
and he urinated on himself. The larger man, who was crying, stood
up.
Epps stated that one of Rottiers's girls
woke up and Hutchinson was going to take her out, but Rottiers
told him not to leave and, pointing to the larger man, said, "This
one has to go, too." Rottiers started punching and spitting on the
larger man, who fell to his knees and begged her to stop, saying
"please, please." Rottiers hit him again and then Hutchinson
punched him. When Hutchinson hit him, the man fell and hit his
head on the edge of the door. Rottiers then stepped on his nose
and mouth with both feet and leaned against the wall to keep her
balance. The man was kicking and Rottiers stood on his face for 10
to 15 minutes. Epps claimed she sat on the bed during the entire
incident. According to Epps, when Rottiers finished she asked Epps
to help her move her things to another motel. Epps helped put her
things into the victims' car and took them to the other motel
while Hutchinson took the girls to a fast-food restaurant.
Epps admitted she helped Rottiers put the smaller man into the
car. They carried him on a blanket. Epps said she grabbed one end
of the blanket, Rottiers grabbed the other end, and they walked up
to the car and put him in the trunk. When Rottiers and Hutchinson
were unable to lift the heavier man's body, which was wrapped in a
blanket, Rottiers asked the manager for a dolly and brought it
back to the room. Epps said she was holding the girls as Rottiers
and Hutchinson put the "big guy" on the dolly, pulled him out to
the car, and put him in the trunk on top of the "little guy." Epps
also admitted she drove her borrowed car and led Rottiers to a
place near Lake Matthews in the mountains to dispose of the
victims' car and the bodies. On the way back, Epps's car got stuck
in sand and she called for a tow truck. To help pay for the tow
service, Rottiers got into "some other dude's" car and was paid
$150 to do a "quickie." Rottiers used Epps's cell phone to call
for a cab and left on her own, but Epps said she did not know how
she returned to Corona.
When questioned about
DNA evidence, Epps admitted she might have touched a vacuum
cleaner or a vacuum cleaner cord or a telephone cord. She stated
it was possible the two men were tied up when she arrived at the
motel.
Epps denied that she participated in
killing the victims. She denied seeing duct tape on the face of
one of the men. Epps claimed she did not see Rottiers kill the man
who was lying unconscious on the floor when Epps arrived; she only
watched Rottiers kill the "big guy." However, she then stated she
saw Rottiers stand on both men. Epps denied the men were hogtied.
Epps claimed a phone cord was on her foot, she grabbed it, and
then she dropped it without giving it to Rottiers. She claimed
that when she grabbed for the phone cord, Rottiers told Epps to
give her the vacuum cleaner cord, Epps said, "I ain't giving you
shit," and Rottiers then ripped the cord out of a vacuum cleaner.
Epps admitted she watched as Rottiers tied up one of the men with
a cord she ripped out of a vacuum cleaner.
The
People rested on June 9, 2010, in the presence of all three
juries.
B. The Defense Cases
1. Epps's and Rottiers's defense
On June
9, 2010, after the People rested, Rottiers and Epps presented no
witnesses and rested in the presence of all three juries based
upon "the sufficiency of the prosecution case."
2. Hutchinson's defense
The next day,
June 10, Hutchinson's counsel informed the court and counsel for
the other parties that Hutchinson had decided to testify on his
own behalf.
In the presence of all three juries,
Markson first presented the testimony of Virgal Cooper, who stated
that he used methamphetamine in the summer of 2006, he lived at
the National Inn motel in Corona at that time, and Hutchinson was
his methamphetamine supplier. Cooper indicated that in late August
2006, he used his cell phone to call Hutchinson to buy some
methamphetamine. Although Cooper initially stated he called
Hutchinson after midnight, he then acknowledged his cell phone
records showed he made the call at 10:26 p.m. Cooper met with
Hutchinson at the bottom of the stairs outside Cooper's motel room
about 20 or 30 minutes later and bought some methamphetamine from
Hutchinson. As they were sitting on the stairs, Cooper saw a small
car pull into the motel parking lot. According to Cooper, four
people were in the car: Rottiers, two "Hispanic guys," and an
African-American woman. When asked by Hutchinson's counsel whether
he saw any of those four people in the courtroom, Cooper testified
he saw one: Rottiers.
On cross-examination by
Epps's counsel, Cooper stated he did not know Epps, but he had met
her twice through "other people." When counsel said, "You told
Officer Gibson, `I never met Franchune Epps at all and cannot
recall ever having met her,'" Cooper responded he had "[n]ever met
her formally." Counsel then asked Cooper, "You don't recognize her
in the courtroom today?" Cooper replied, "No, I don't." He then
testified he met Epps at a motel "[d]own the street—I forget the
name of it—by the pool hall." When asked, Cooper could not
remember the name of the pool hall, but indicated it was next door
to a CVS pharmacy.
a. Hutchinson's testimony
before all three juries
Also on June 10,
2010, following Cooper's testimony, Hutchinson testified on his
own behalf in the presence of all three juries. He indicated that
he and Rottiers started living together in June or July of 2006.
He noticed that she put the name "Krazie Hutchinson" on one of the
phone bills that was in her name. On August 11, 2006, he moved his
belongings into room 114 at the National Inn, but did not always
stay there.
Hutchinson stated that on Sunday
morning, August 27, he woke up at the Motel 6 and went over to the
National Inn to check on Rottiers's twin daughters. When he
arrived, he found Rottiers vacuuming the room. He and Rottiers got
into an intense argument. Rottiers tried to bully him, and he told
her he was no longer going to pay for the room and she needed to
find somewhere to go. After 20 minutes, he left. He testified he
had no plans to get back with Rottiers that evening or to watch
her daughters or to commit a robbery that night.
Hutchinson stated he next saw Rottiers at around 2:30 the next
morning (August 28). He was sitting on a chair behind a wall in
the carport and putting some "dope" in a sack for Cooper, who had
called him at 10:30 p.m., when two cars came in and parked in the
carport. Rottiers was driving one of the cars and Chavez and
Gabriel were with her. Hutchinson identified Epps in the courtroom
as the driver of the other car. He testified that Epps was
carrying a stick in her hand that looked like half of a mop
handle.
Hutchinson indicated that he confronted
Rottiers about the two men as they were walking towards room 114,
and she told him she was about to rob the men and asked whether he
wanted to help. Hutchinson said he told Rottiers he had $900 in
his pocket and did not need to rob anyone. Rottiers went to the
room and he went back to talk to Cooper. Shortly thereafter, out
of curiosity, Hutchinson went to the room. He stated he knocked on
the door, and, when Rottiers opened it, he saw the two men were
dressed and money and wallets were on the bed. He saw Epps sitting
in a chair by the kitchen playing with a cell phone. Rottiers, who
had been speaking to the two men in Spanish, told Hutchinson that
one of them said he was going to do something to her girls.
Hutchinson testified he immediately jumped on the "big guy"
(Gabriel) and they both fell on the bed.
Hutchinson testified his statement to Detective Masson that he hit
the man after the man lunged at Rottiers was a "pure ass lie."
Hutchinson also testified that his statement to Detective Masson
that Epps had a gun was false, and he made that false statement
because Rottiers asked him to do so.
According
to Hutchinson, he sat down on the bed and read a magazine after he
hit Gabriel. He said that Rottiers and Epps left the room to check
the car, and he stayed in the room. The door was open and the men
did not leave. Rottiers and Epps quickly returned. Hutchinson
testified that Rottiers looked at him and Epps with a "mean" look,
and then hit the "big dude," Gabriel, on the back of his head with
the telephone that was in the room. According to Hutchinson, Epps
then hit the other man (Chavez) with the stick she was carrying,
and Hutchinson left the room after telling Rottiers and Epps they
were crazy.
Hutchinson testified he returned to
room 114 later that morning at around 4:00 a.m. He indicated he
did not expect Gabriel and Chavez to be there because "pretty much
the robbery's done." He saw that Chavez was naked and hogtied with
his hands behind his back and his wrists tied to his ankles. He
had a belt around his neck. Hutchinson acknowledged that, at
Rottiers's request, he told Detective Masson that Rottiers had
told him that "[Epps] made me do it," but he testified that
statement was not true. Hutchinson stated that Rottiers "had asked
me to blame [Epps] for that."
According to
Hutchinson, Chavez started choking when Rottiers tried to loosen
the belt around his neck. Hutchinson said he saw Gabriel lying
naked and unresponsive on the floor, moaning and groaning.
Rottiers started asking for cords to tie up the men, and
Hutchinson suggested she use a vacuum cleaner cord. Hutchinson
tugged weakly on the cord, and Rottiers snatched it and ripped it
out of the vacuum cleaner. He stated that Epps threw a phone cord
near Rottiers, and he was in the room for only about 10 to 15
minutes and then left.
Hutchinson said he
returned to the National Inn and walked back to room 114 a third
time at around 6:00 a.m. after Rottiers called him. As he was
walking back to the room, he saw the manager standing by the
office. As he approached the room, he saw Rottiers coming out of
the room and rolling one of the bodies out on a dolly. When
Rottiers rolled the dolly up to the trunk of the car, she asked
Hutchinson, who was standing next to the trunk, to help her hoist
the body into the trunk. Chavez's body was already in the trunk,
and Epps was also standing by the car. He did not hear Chavez
making any noises and he did not see any movement in the blanket
covering his body.
Hutchinson claimed he did not
help Rottiers put Gabriel's body in the trunk, but admitted that
when Rottiers asked him where she should dump the bodies, he told
her to dump them in a field in the Lake Matthews area. He stated
that he and Rottiers later went to Orange County and Rottiers
complained he did not help her dispose of the bodies.
On June 15, after he completed his testimony, Hutchinson rested.
2. Epps's and Rottiers's defense cases
Also on June 15, after Hutchinson completed his testimony and
rested, Rottiers and Epps rested without presenting any witnesses.