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Wisto,
York have no chance at parole for killing teen
By April Charlton - SantaMariaTimes.com
A mother and son convicted earlier this year of murdering a
Santa Maria teen will die in prison for their roles in the brutal
crime.
Rhonda Wisto and her son, Frank Jacob York, were sentenced
Wednesday to life without the possibility of parole for the
September 2010 slaying of Dystiny Myers.
After the pair’s March trial, jurors found the Nipomo residents
guilty of first-degree murder, conspiracy to commit murder,
torture, kidnapping and aiding-and-abetting.
Prosecutors believe Myers, 15, died sometime between Sept. 25
and 26, 2010, after she was attacked by four men, including York,
at Wisto’s home, where she was beaten, hogtied and stuffed into a
duffel bag.
Firefighters discovered the teen’s burned body off Parkhill
Road, where the men dumped Myers’ body and lit it on fire. Wisto
ordered the murder, in part, because she believed the teen was
disrespectful.
Myers died from mechanical asphyxiation and blunt-force trauma.
She also had toxic levels of methamphetamine in her system, which
contributed to her death, according to an autopsy report.
Kathy Clark, Myers’ grandmother, told Wisto and York, who
remained stoic during the sentencing hearing, that she forgave
them for cutting her granddaughter’s life short, although she
added they would never know the extent of her family’s pain.
“The last 33 months have been the longest days of my life,”
Clark said, adding her granddaughter was full of life and love.
“I’ll never get to see my grandchildren. I’ll never get to see my
granddaughter get married or graduate from high school.”
If Myers hadn’t been murdered, she may have been on track to
graduate from high school next month.
“Today is a new beginning for our family,” Clark added,
fighting back tears. “It’s a new beginning for Dystiny.”
Three other defendants in the case — Santa Maria resident Ty
Michael Hill, Cody Lane Miller of Fresno and Jason Adam Greenwell
of Nipomo — avoided trials by agreeing to plead guilty to the
teen’s murder.
Hill and Miller were both sentenced to life without parole,
while Greenwell took a plea bargain in exchange for his testimony
during the trial. He will be sentenced later this summer to 15
years to life with the possibility of parole.
Aileen Myers-Lucas, Dystiny’s mother, told Wisto and her son
that she didn’t forgive them for killing her daughter and hoped
they rotted in their prison cells.
The grieving mother also told Wisto, who wouldn’t look in the
family’s direction, her daughter was a somebody, and she’s missed
by everyone who knew the vibrant teen. Myers loved small children
and enjoyed singing and dancing, her mother added.
During the trial, Wisto’s former cellmate at County Jail told
jurors the woman had no remorse for Myers’ death because she was a
nobody that nobody cared about.
Wisto didn’t speak during the hearing, which Clark said the
family expected, however, York’s attorney, Gerald Carrasco, read a
letter his client wrote to Myers’ family.
“I know my words carry no weight,” Carrasco read from York’s
letter. “I am sorry for the loss and heartache that has happened
in your everyday lives. There’s an angel looking over you now.”
Outside the courtroom, Clark said she didn’t believe York’s
apology was sincere and that she’s troubled by Wisto’s role in
Myers’ murder.
“That lady took four young men and got them to do something
that they paid a tragic price for,” Clark said. “She was very,
very selfish. That’s what bothers me the most.”
Wisto and York have 60 days to appeal the court’s ruling,
however, a conviction of kidnapping during the commission of a
murder carries a mandatory sentence of life in prison without
parole.
By Patrick S. Pemberton - SanLuisObispo.com
A mother and son will spend the rest of their lives in prison
after a jury found them guilty Friday of murdering 15-year-old
Dystiny Myers.
The jury’s decision to convict Rhonda Maye Wisto, 49, and her
22-year-old son, Frank Jacob York, puts an end to a 2½-year legal
battle that spawned thousands of court documents and cost San Luis
Obispo County more than $1 million. For the victim’s survivors, it
closed another chapter of a nightmare that began Sept. 26, 2010.
“I remember the day like yesterday when I was told (of Myers’
death),” Kathy Clark, the victim’s grandmother, said afterward. “I
look at today as justice being served.”
The defendants will receive mandatory sentences of life without
parole when they are formally sentenced May 8.
After roughly two weeks of testimony, the jury announced it had
reached a verdict roughly 90 minutes after it began deliberating.
Before a court clerk read the verdicts, three jurors glanced at
Myers’ family, who sat in the front row. One female juror nodded
her head toward Aileen Myers, the victim’s mother.
Myers’ mother, grandmother and aunts sat in the front row of
the audience, with arms linked, as the verdicts were read. When it
was announced that the defendants were guilty of all counts —
first-degree murder, conspiracy to commit murder, plus
enhancements for kidnapping and torture — Aileen Myers trembled
and cried. Wisto also cried, more when her convictions were
announced than when her son’s were read. York closed his eyes
before and after his verdicts were announced.
Afterward, jurors declined to comment, one saying the stress
from the trial had been enough.
Three other defendants in the case — Ty Michael Hill of Santa
Maria, Cody Lane Miller of Fresno and Jason Adam Greenwell of
Nipomo — previously agreed to enter guilty pleas, avoiding trials.
While both physical and eyewitness testimony implicated York,
the evidence wasn’t as abundant for Wisto, who ordered the murder,
according to the prosecution. For that reason, when the verdicts
were read, the family reacted more strongly to news of Wisto’s
conviction.
“We honestly thought from the beginning that it wasn’t going to
happen with her,” Clark said.
Wisto’s mother, who attended much of the trial, declined to
comment afterward.
According to court testimony, Myers was a runaway who showed up
at Wisto’s home with Hill. Covello said they don’t know for sure
how Myers met Hill. But she wound up staying with Wisto, who
operated a methamphetamine ring out of her home.
According to trial testimony, Wisto ordered the attack because
Myers had been disrespectful to her. While York was reluctant to
participate in the attack, his mother goaded him into it, Covello
said.
“Every piece of evidence we had … indicated that she had
control of him,” Covello said. “In my opening statement I said it:
She definitely took her son down this road. She destroyed his life
as well as Dystiny’s.”
After Myers was beaten and bound, the male defendants
transported her body to rural Santa Margarita. Her body was then
dumped and set on fire.
As they were dumping her body, Hill and York turned on Miller,
hitting him with shovels.
Briefly knocked down, Miller managed to flee. Fearing for his
life, he later told law enforcement what had happened.
If Miller had been murdered, as Hill planned, finding the
culprits would have been difficult, Covello said.
“The information he provided to the first responders, that set
this entire investigation in action, is part of what led the
Sheriff’s Department to get them so quickly,” Covello said.
Hill, Wisto, York and Greenwell were arrested later in the day.
Miller was arrested the day after at a hospital, where he had been
taken for his injuries.
While the trial featured difficult testimony about Myers’
injuries, it also exposed some inner workings of the local meth
trade. Miller’s attorney, Gael Mueller, said her client never
would have participated were it not for the drugs. York’s
attorney, Gerald Carrasco, also argued that it was a factor in the
case.
“It certainly fueled this one,” Covello said. “On the other
hand, there are a lot of people who use methamphetamine who don’t
commit this sort of crime.”
Prosecutor: Defendant in Myers' case
sexually molested the teen
March 21, 2013
Before participating in the murder of Dystiny
Myers, Frank Jacob York had his way with her, a prosecutor argued
Thursday, which is partly why his mother had the 15-year-old girl
murdered.
“Jacob York is not just a murderer,” argued
Assistant District Attorney Tim Covello. “Rhonda Wisto has to
protect him because he’s also a child molester.”
As attorneys offered closing arguments in the
murder trial of York and his mother, Covello offered a theory that
York had been sexually involved with Myers, a runaway who had been
staying at Wisto’s Nipomo home.
If Myers had left — as was her plan — the teen
would have told about sleeping with York, then 19, and she would
have told about the drug activity at the home, Covello said,
bringing trouble to York and Wisto. “And the whole thing comes
crumbling down. It comes down on his head, and it comes down on
her head.”
After Covello’s allegation, York attorney
Gerald Carrasco asked for a mistrial, saying it was “highly
prejudicial.”
“There has not been any evidence to suggest
that my client is a child molester,” he said in the court after
Superior Court Judge Barry LaBarbera excused the jury for a break.
In response, Covello noted that York had
written a fellow county jail inmate a note that said Myers was
being prostituted. And it was revealed in testimony that York and
Myers slept in the same bed.
After LaBarbera denied the mistrial request,
Covello furthered his argument: “She was kept. She was used. She
was tortured. She was murdered. She was disposed of.”
Covello has also argued that Myers had shown
disrespect to Wisto, another motive for the crime. After she was
allegedly beaten and bound, Myers’ burned body was found in rural
Santa Margarita on Sept. 26, 2010.
Ty Michael Hill of Santa Maria and Cody Lane
Miller of Fresno have also pled guilty to murdering Myers.
Before the York and Wisto trial was given to
the jury Thursday, the rest of Covello’s closing argument weighed
heavily on the testimony of Jason Adam Greenwell, a Nipomo man who
has agreed to plead guilty to second-degree murder in the case.
Greenwell said Wisto and Hill planned the
murder, and York helped carry it out.
Greenwell, who allegedly held Myers’ legs while
York hit her with a bat, was the least culpable of the attackers,
Covello said. Feeling remorse, he began cooperating with
investigators the day after the crime.
Covello said Greenwell’s version of the events
– offered to investigators well before a plea deal was made – was
repeatedly backed by the “mountains of evidence” presented by
other witnesses.
Wisto’s attorney, Michael Cummins, said
Greenwell’s testimony was crucial to the prosecution.
“If you believe Jason Greenwell told the truth,
the whole truth and nothing but the truth, then you should convict
my client,” Cummins told the jury.
But, he said, Greenwell is a “serial liar,”
motivated to get a better deal that would allow him a chance to
get parole some day.
There was no DNA or fingerprint evidence to
implicate his client, he said.
But Wisto’s former cellmate, Tabatha Brown,
testified that Wisto admitted to being involved in Myers’ death.
Brown’s statements to police were offered after she was sentenced
in a separate case.
With York’s DNA and fingerprints on the bat
that was allegedly used in the attack, Carrasco conceded that his
client was involved.
“But the real issue here is, if he’s guilty of
murder, then in what capacity?” he said.
Intoxication, he said, is a defense to some
elements of the crimes, particularly the intent, deliberation and
premeditation needed for a first-degree murder conviction.
“This may be one where you say, ‘I don’t really
like the law,’” he said, adding. “We are a nation of laws … even
for him.”
Greenwell testified that the group had smoked
methamphetamine the week leading up to the murder.
But Covello said getting high didn’t prevent
the group from plotting the murder – which they did by writing and
gathering a list of things needed to dispose of a body.
“It’s a goal-directed activity,” he said.
“Every single step they made.”
Testimony Recalls Santa Maria Teen’s Last
Words
Jason Adam Greenwell, who cut a deal with
prosecutors, recounts Dystiny Myers slaying
By Patrick S. Pemberton, San Luis Obispo County
Tribune
March 19, 2013
As four men allegedly hog-tied and brutally
beat 15-year-old Dystiny Myers of Santa Maria, she gave her
attackers a heartbreaking message, according to one of her alleged
killers:
“She said to tell her mom she loved her,” Jason
Adam Greenwell testified Monday.
As Greenwell told a San Luis Obispo Superior
Court jury what might have been Myers’ final words, the victim’s
mother — who had been sitting in the packed audience — quickly
rushed out of the courtroom, crying.
The emotional moment came as Greenwell — one of
the five accused of murdering Myers — testified against Frank
Jacob York and his mother, Rhonda Maye Wisto, both of Nipomo.
Greenwell’s testimony — agreed to in exchange
for a second-degree murder conviction and a 15-years-to-life
sentence — became more important to the prosecution after
co-defendant Cody Lane Miller of Fresno reneged on his plea deal
moments earlier.
Miller, who had agreed to testify in exchange
for a sentence of 39 years and four months to life in prison,
briefly took the stand outside the jury’s presence and announced
that he planned to plead the Fifth Amendment, exercising his right
not to incriminate himself. As a result, the deal was made void,
and a date for a separate trial will be set for his case.
Neither Miller nor his attorney, Gael Mueller,
offered a reason for his decision. During the trial, however,
several witnesses have been reluctant to testify, fearing
retaliation by people close to Wisto and York. Prosecutors have
said the defendants have ties to white supremacist gangs.
Without Miller, Greenwell becomes the
prosecution’s lone eyewitness implicating Wisto as the one who
planned the Sept. 26, 2010, attack and her son as a participant.
Another defendant, Ty Hill of Santa Maria, is
not expected to testify after receiving a life prison term without
the possibility of parole.
The burned body of Myers was found by
firefighters responding to a call of a blaze near Santa Margarita.
While Greenwell said Wisto helped Hill plan the
murder, Wisto’s attorney, Michael Cummins, noted inconsistencies
in Greenwell’s various statements to police, saying Greenwell
initially didn’t implicate Wisto.
Cummins suggested Greenwell changed his story
in order to strike a deal with the prosecution. Greenwell, also of
Nipomo, said he initially wanted to protect Wisto because he’d
stayed at her home.
“It came to the point where I started telling
the truth,” Greenwell said.
Prior to the murder, Greenwell said, he
overheard Wisto and Hill plan the crime.
“I heard Ty ask Rhonda to get something that
burns real hot, real fast,” he said.
Greenwell and other witnesses have said that
Wisto was angry at Myers for disrespecting her.
Hill made a list of things needed to dispose of
a body, Greenwell said, and Wisto began gathering the items on the
list.
As the male defendants were talking near
Wisto’s garage in Nipomo, Greenwell said, the following occurred:
Myers exited the house and walked toward them
with a bag of clothes.
“I just wanted to say goodbye,” she said. “I’m
leaving.”
After the teenage runaway returned to the
house, the men followed. Myers went into York’s bedroom — where
she’d been staying — and Hill put the plan in motion.
“Ty told everybody to get dark clothes on and
to put on rubber gloves,” Greenwell said.
Greenwell went into Wisto’s room to get a dark
shirt and encountered Wisto and York.
”Rhonda was in there telling him — instructing
him — how to get dressed,” he said. “Jacob also said to his mom,
‘I don’t want to do this.’ And she said, ‘Sometimes things just
have to happen.’”
When he exited Wisto’s room, Greenwell said,
Hill told the others to enter York’s room, where Myers was sitting
on a mattress, her wrists having been taped by Hill. Hill later
told Greenwell he’d drugged Myers in the room.
“Dystiny was clearly out of it,” he said.
A pathologist previously testified that Myers
had a toxic level of methamphetamine in her system.
As Miller began binding Myers with duct tape
and rope, Greenwell said, Hill and York punched her. Hill also hit
Myers with a baseball bat before handing it to York.
“Ty told me to hold Dystiny down while Jacob
hit her legs with a baseball bat,” he said.
York then hit Myers on the shins several times,
he said, and kicked and stomped her.
In his interviews with police, York said he
only kicked Myers a couple of times in the legs.
After the beating, Hill placed Myers in a
duffel bag, which Greenwell carried to Wisto’s truck. Wisto had
placed a 55-gallon drum and a bag of flammable fluids near the
truck, he said.
“She told Ty, Jacob and I to make sure we had
nothing in our pockets, and she gave Ty a walkie talkie,”
Greenwell said.
After the group drove to Santa Margarita,
Miller began to carry Myers, whose head poked out of the bag, to a
remote location.
“She looked dead, basically,” Greenwell said.
Frank Jacob York’s prints recovered on bat used to beat teen
By April Charlton - SantaMariaTimes.com
March 13, 2013
A baseball bat allegedly used to severely beat a Santa Maria
teen before she was killed had the fingerprints of one of her
accused murderers on it, as well as several drops of blood.
Two of the three prints recovered from the wood baseball bat
belong to Frank Jacob York, who is on trial for the 2010
first-degree murder of 15-year-old Dystiny Myers.
The third print on the bat didn’t have enough detail to make
any type of match, according to testimony from Ken Jones, a
forensic specialist with the San Luis Obispo County Sheriff’s
Office.
Jones testified two of the three prints he was able to lift
from the baseball bat matched York’s left middle finger and his
right palm, and that the bat also tested positive for the presence
of blood.
The bat was located in the garage at the Nipomo home of York’s
mother, Rhonda Maye Wisto, who is also on trial for Myers’ murder.
The mother and son pair also face charges of kidnapping,
torture and aiding-and-abetting connected to the teen’s death.
Myers was allegedly attacked with the bat as well as other
weapons at Wisto’s home on the evening of Sept. 25, 2010, before
she was driven to a secluded area in northern San Luis Obispo
County, where her body was dumped and partially burned.
Prosecutors believe Myers died sometime during the drive from
Wisto’s home in the 300 block of Mars Court to the wooded site
dump site near Santa Margarita.
The teen died from mechanical asphyxiation and blunt-force
trauma.
At some point during the attack, Myers was hogtied, had sweat
pants tied around her throat and was duct taped from head to toe.
She also had a glove stuffed down her throat during the drive to
North County.
According to an autopsy report, the teen also had toxic levels
of methamphetamine in her system, which contributed to her death.
A list of items needed to bury Myers’ body was found in a
garbage can outside of Wisto’s home, but Jones said fingerprints
recovered from the small piece of paper didn’t match any of the
five suspects accused of murdering the teen.
Santa Maria resident and suspected drug dealer Ty Michael Hill
had been charged with Myers’ murder and was facing the death
penalty for his role in the gruesome crime.
He agreed to plead guilty to first-degree murder and conspiracy
to commit murder in exchange for the death penalty being taken off
the table.
Hill was sentenced earlier this year to life in prison without
the possibility of parole.
Also charged in the murder are Cody Miller of Fresno and Jason
Greenwell of Nipomo. Both men have agreed to plea bargains in
exchange for lighter sentences and will testify for the
prosecution in the case.
A large amount of blood also was discovered in the bed of
Wisto’s Toyota truck, which was allegedly used to transport Myers
from Nipomo to Santa Margarita.
Three shovels and numerous weapons, including knives, a sword
and brass knuckles also were recovered from Wisto’s vehicle.
By Patrick S. Pemberton - SanLuisObispo.com
After Ty Michael Hill wrote out a list of things needed to kill
Dystiny Myers, Rhonda Wisto provided the items on that list, a
prosecutor told a jury Monday. But more importantly, he added,
Wisto enlisted her son to help kill the 15-year-old Santa Maria
teen.
“She provided everything needed to accomplish this crime,” said
assistant district attorney Tim Covello during his opening
statements.
Two and a half years after Myers’s burned body was found in
rural Santa Margarita, attorneys began presenting evidence to a
jury for two of the defendants, Wisto and her son, Frank Jacob
York. Three other defendants – Hill, Cody Miller and Jason
Greenwell -- have agreed to guilty pleas.
While laying out the prosecution’s case, Covello said Myers, a
runaway from Santa Maria, was killed because she knew about the
group’s illegal activities and because she had disrespected Wisto.
“In the word’s of Rhonda Wisto’s son, ‘Dystiny had a mouth on
her. She was popping off,’” Covello said.
Wisto’s attorney, Michael Cummins, said Wisto was “not a
saint,” but she was also not a murderer.
“You’re going to get to know several murderers in this case,”
he said, saying Hill – not Wisto -- was the ringleader. “The
evidence is going to show that Ty Michael Hill is the purest
manifestation of evil in human form you have ever encountered.”
York’s attorney, meanwhile, said his client never knew of the
plot to kill Myers – and just happened to walk into his mother’s
home after the others had beaten and bound the victim.
“Her head had been crushed by a baseball bat swung by Ty Hill,”
Gerald Carrasco said.
After the gang decided to kill Myers, Covello said, they
acquired the items on Hill’s list, including a tent bag, three
shovels and a comforter.
“They used a lot of duct tape,” Covello said, “and I’m afraid
you’re going to see how they used duct tape.”
Other items they procured included lime, rope, a baseball bat
and brass knuckles, Covello said. And when the attack began in
Wisto’s Nipomo home, he said, it was a group effort.
“Four men attacked (Myers), with weapons,” Covello said. “She
fought, and she kept struggling, and she said she was sorry.”
At one point, he said, Hill told York to “Mark McGwire” the
teen’s legs with a baseball bat. McGwire is the former home
run-hitting Major Leaguer.
After the attack, Covello said, Myers was bound with tape, tied
with rope and stuffed into the tent bag. Then the men took her in
Wisto’s truck to Santa Margarita.
Around 2 a.m., the group stopped at a Chevron gas station in
Pismo Beach to get refreshments. As unknowing Pismo police pulled
into the station parking lot, Hill was looking at sunglasses
inside.
“Dystiny’s outside struggling,” Covello said. “She’s making
noise, so Cody Miller has to quiet her.”
Miller allegedly told investigators he punched Myers and
stuffed a glove in her mouth – a glove that Kenneth Jones, a
forensic specialist with the sheriff’s office, later held up for
jurors.
At a rural location in Santa Margarita, Covello said, Miller
carried Myers – now deceased – to a pit the group had dug. After
he dropped her in the hole, Hill doused her with flammable
materials, and she was lit on fire.
“And they left her like garbage,” Covello said.
The group then attacked Miller, who managed to escape – though
his nose was partially amputated in the attack. He later told
firefighters and investigators what had happened.
After the crime, the three remaining suspects stopped at Jack
in the Box in San Luis Obispo for tacos and headed to Nipomo. Hill
and Greenwell were arrested later that morning. York was
apprehended that evening.
With little cross-examination from defense attorneys – who will
likely save most of their questions for co-defendants Miller and
Greenwell – the trial moved quickly. Members of Myers’s family,
including her mother and grandmother, sat in the front row.
When Covello showed the jurors a photo of the pit, with Myers
in the hole, her mother, Aileen Myers, ran out of the courtroom,
sobbing. As he showed photos of the autopsy, the victim’s
grandmother, Kathy Clark, followed.
The graphic photos showed a badly burned Myers, severely bound
with tape and rope.
“The rope kind of went everywhere,” said Steven Crawford, who
examined the body for the coroner’s office.
Testimony reveals one suspect told detective that the teenager was
‘disrespectful’; all five defendants are ordered to stand trial
By Nick Wilson- SanLuisObispo.com
Testimony in
court Tuesday hinted at a possible motive for the September
killing of Dystiny Myers when a detective said that one of the
suspects allegedly told police that Myers was “being
disrespectful.”
The second day of the
preliminary hearing in San Luis Obispo Superior Court against five
defendants accused of torturing and killing the 15-year-old Santa
Maria girl concluded with a ruling from Judge Barry LaBarbera that
sufficient evidence was presented to proceed to trial.
The defendants are Frank Jacob York, Rhonda Maye Wisto and Jason
Adam Greenwell, all of Nipomo; Cody Lane Miller of Fresno; and Ty
Michael Hill of Santa Maria. They are scheduled to enter new pleas
at an arraignment Feb. 24 in LaBarbera’s court. They previously
entered not-guilty pleas.
The new arraignment
also is the deadline to determine whether the prosecution will
file death penalty charges against the defendants.
Prosecutors haven’t decided whether to seek the death penalty or
life without the possibility of parole if the defendants are
convicted.
York told sheriff’s detective Robert
Burgeson that Wisto, his mother, ordered the beating and killing
of Myers on Sept. 26 at their home in Nipomo.
When the detective asked why she wanted Myers dead, York responded
that “she (Myers) was being disrespectful,” Burgeson testified in
court.
But no statement from York or any of the other
defendants discussed by investigators in court this week has
detailed exactly how Myers was being disrespectful or specifically
to whom.
Burgeson testified that he also interviewed
Greenwell, who told him he’d heard Hill talk about harming Myers a
couple of days before her death, but “nothing happened and
(Greenwell) didn’t take it seriously.”
Each of the five defendants and Myers were
using methamphetamines around the time of the alleged homicide,
sheriff’s detective Patrick Zuchelli testified. It’s unclear if
Myers was voluntarily using the drug.
Hill also
gave Myers a shot of what Greenwell believed to be heroin before
she was attacked on Sept. 26 in a bedroom in Wisto’s home with
blows, kicks and a baseball bat, according to Burgeson.
The details of who participated in the beatings
have differed in the statements of four of the defendants —
Miller, Hill, Greenwell and York — to police.
But all five of the defendants have been
identified as participants in some capacity in the attack on
Myers, depending on the defendants’ version of events, according
to detectives’ testimony. Despite the often cold-blooded behavior
of the defendants as described by detectives, York told police
that he told his mother he had second thoughts about the attack on
Myers just before the beating, Burgeson testified. He said he was
scared, Burgeson said. But York said his mother told him “stuff
has to happen,” according to the detective.
“She
told him not to worry, and that it would be OK,” Burgeson said.
“She told him she loved him.”
York stated that
Hill planned the attack and that Hill was familiar with the Santa
Margarita location where Myers was found dead after being bound,
beaten and burned. Authorities found her body in a dug-out pit
about 5 a.m. Sept. 26, Burgeson said.
Hill also
wanted to kill Miller, one of the suspects in the crime who ran
into the woods near the crime scene after he was struck in the
head with a shovel, York said, adding that he heard Hill say he
wanted to chop Miller’s head off with a samurai sword.
Wisto had ordered the killing of Miller, who
they believed to be a police informant, according to the police
statement of Hill, who spoke with Santa Maria police supervisor
Daniel Cohen.
No witnesses were called to the
stand by the defense attorneys Tuesday, and no arguments were made
by either side.
She had sweatpants tied around her neck and a glove shoved down
her throat, investigators say
By Nick Wilson - SanLuisObispo.com
The horrific
final moments of slain teen Dystiny Myers’ life were described in
San Luis Obispo Superior Court on Monday by investigators who
depicted the five people accused of killing her as members of a
drug ring whose alleged female leader ordered the girl’s killing.
But no motive for Myers’ homicide was revealed in a preliminary
hearing that continues today in Judge Barry LaBarbera’s courtroom.
Detectives described a callous homicide that was capped off by
three of the defendants making a stop at Jack in the Box in San
Luis Obispo for tacos.
That was after allegedly beating, binding and
partially burning Myers’ body, which was discovered in a remote
Santa Margarita field Sept. 26.
Myers was a 15-year-old who was remembered
fondly by her teachers and principal at a Santa Maria junior high
school.
She’d also spent time in juvenile hall in Santa
Barbara County and had run away from home, according to
investigators who took the stand Monday.
The
night she died, she was allegedly assaulted by multiple defendants
and beaten with a baseball bat at the Nipomo home of Rhonda Maye
Wisto — the defendant who investigators said ordered her killing.
Defendants Cody Lane Miller of Fresno, Ty
Michael Hill of Santa Maria and Jason Adam Greenwell of Nipomo
each gave police statements that three investigators recounted at
Monday’s hearing. The statements are consistent in many ways, yet
it is still unclear exactly how the events transpired.
Each of the five defendants, who also include Frank Jacob York of
Nipomo, has pleaded not guilty to murder charges.
Miller told a sheriff’s detective that after meeting Hill and
York, he went to Nipomo to engage in and learn about drug sales
and stayed at Wisto’s home for a period of time, San Luis Obispo
County sheriff’s Detective Eric Twisselman testified.
Other testimony indicated that Hill, Wisto,
York and Greenwell each got high on methamphetamines on the day of
the incident.
According to Twisselman, Miller
saw the four other defendants play a role in Myers’ beating at
Wisto’s Nipomo home before they put Myers, who was still alive, in
a canvas bag and carried her to a pickup with a camper shell.
Miller sat in the bed of the truck with Myers as Hill, York and
Greenwell rode in the cab, Twisselman testified.
Miller told the detective he was ordered to keep her quiet at a
Chevron gas station as they stopped to fill up with fuel, because
law enforcement officers were at the station.
Miller hit Myers several times in the truck at the gas station
before the group drove to the remote location where they dug a
hole for Myers’ body, Twisselman testified.
Myers was still alive when they got to the
Santa Margarita area, Twisselman said Miller told him, though
other testimony suggested she may have been dead by then and that
Miller had shoved a glove down her throat during the ride.
Miller told the detective that as they dug, he
was whacked in the head twice with a shovel and later ran from
York, who chased him with a shovel before he escaped into the
woods.
Miller said he hid before fire department
officials arrived, and he was taken to Sierra Vista Regional
Medical Center for treatment for a broken jaw that had to be wired
shut.
Wisto had ordered the killings of Myers and
Miller, according to the police statement of Hill, who spoke with
Santa Maria police supervisor Daniel Cohen.
Wisto believed Miller was working with law
enforcement as a confidant about their narcotics operation, Cohen
said.
Forensic investigators found a glove
shoved down Myers’ throat, sweatpants tied around her neck and
skull fractures. One of her eyes had been gouged out of its
socket, and there was severe bruising throughout her body.
Detectives said they found a baseball bat with
blood and York’s fingerprints on it at the Nipomo home.
Myers died from mechanical asphyxiation with blunt force trauma
and a toxic level of meth in her system, Sheriff-Coroner’s
Detective Stuart MacDonald testified.
Sheriff’s
detective Patrick Zuchelli testified that Miller told Greenwell
that he’d shoved a glove down Myers’ throat during the car ride
north. Greenwell also said he saw Hill light Myers’ bound body on
fire, Zuchelli testified.
Later, Greenwell, Hill
and York stopped at Jack in the Box on Santa Rosa Street, and
Greenwell went in to buy $8 worth of tacos, Zuchelli testified.
Greenwell’s attorney, Harold Mesick, asked
Zuchelli if his client appeared remorseful in the second of two
interviews they conducted, and the detective said “yes.”
Other questions from defense attorneys seemed
to focus on when investigators believed Myers died based on their
interviews. The defendants’ statements to police seemed to differ
on whether she died before or after the group arrived in the Santa
Margarita area.
The hearing continues at 9:30 a.m. today in
LaBarbera’s courtroom.