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Peter
C. CONTOS
He had served in the Air Force and worked security
jobs. Until Friday night, he worked as a technical sergeant with the
102nd Fighter Wing guarding F-15s at Otis Air National Guard Base on
Cape Cod. He wanted to be a state trooper.
No one -- not his best friend, not his family, not
even his wife, Robyn -- had an inkling that Contos had been leading a
double life with a girlfriend and two sons in the pleasant upper
Highlands section of Lowell.
They suddenly discovered the other woman over the
weekend after police discovered the bodies of Catherine Rice, 35, and
their two sons, Benjamin Rice, 4, and 2-month-old Ryan Contos.
Police believe Contos killed Rice early Saturday
morning. She was found in a half-filled bathtub with blunt trauma wounds
to her head and neck. Police said he may have been trying to make her
death appear to be a suicide.
Police believe he then killed his children and tried
to hide their bodies on the Cape Cod air base where he worked.
Prosecutor Beth Merachnik said Contos' car was seen
parked outside of Rice's first-floor apartment in Lowell around midnight
Friday. He was seen loading his car at 6:15 a.m. Saturday, she said.
Police said Contos told them he hadn't seen Rice
since Christmas. Then he admitted he'd been at her house late Friday but
had not gone in. He changed his story a third time and said he had gone
into the home for only 30 minutes.
State and local police continued to search for the
children all night. They found their bodies with towels wrapped around
their lifeless necks at 5 a.m. when they looked in his locker at the air
base.
Contos had no record with Lowell police of domestic
violence. Rice had not taken out any restraining orders against him.
Autopsies on Rice and the children showed all three
were strangled with a foreign object, according to Middlesex County
District Attorney spokesman Brian Heffron. He would not say with what
they were strangled.
The Sun of Lowell reported that Rice met Contos about
five years ago when she worked for a tax preparation agency and he was a
security guard at a store in the Pheasant Lane Mall in Nashua, N.H. She
worked for New England Investment Companies of Boston. On Monday, the
day of Contos' arraignment, she was scheduled to return to work from
maternity leave.
Catherine Rice's parents, who live in the Framingham
area, have refused to release any photos of her or her two children.
A friend of Robyn Contos said she was devastated by
the tragedy.
"She's a mess," said a friend outside the courtroom
who identified herself as Stacy. "No one knew."
Victim Impact-"to
turn our rage"
Cecil and Shirley Rice's daughter Cathy and her
two small sons, Benjamin and Ryan, were murdered by the boy's father
Peter Contos. Contos, who had married another woman during the
period he was dating Cathy Rice and after he had fathered Benjamin,
feared that Rice might disclose their relationship, jeopardizing his
career and his marriage. Mr. and Mrs. Rice presented their Victim
Impact Statement to the Middlesex, Massachusetts County Court Feb.
6, 1999.
After thanking the judge, the police, and the
prosecutors with compassion and great dignity, the Rices turned to the
defense attorney: "Mr. Hrones you had a very difficult job to do, but
you did it. It was important to us that Mr. Contos should get as good a
defense as possible. We wanted to be sure Mr. Contos was the guilty
party, and we wanted to be sure that justice was not circumvented by an
inadequate defense. Yours was not a popular task, but we are glad you
did it....However, Mr. Hrones, it is inexcusable that you maligned Cathy
in the press and in some of your remarks in the court.... Saying this
was a case of fatal attraction or that his mistress made him do it seeks
to reduce or excuse the guilt and responsibility of Peter Contos by
blaming Cathy. This is not simply a viable but unpopular defense, as
some have suggested, it is gratuitously malevolent and simply adds to
and supports the horrendous behavior of your client....So, sir, while we
understand that your task was difficult, and are grateful that you took
it on and did it as well as the evidence would allow, we ask that you
never again malign a woman victim in the press or in the court to defend
any alleged criminal, however deserving or innocent."
The Rices speak of the many affected by their
daughter's and grandsons' deaths-a list almost lyrical, almost Homeric-and
conclude thus: "Lastly, we have a wish that may or may not fit
into the legal framework. Besides asking for the maximum sentence that
the law allows, we ask that the court require Mr. Contos to make
reparation to society, as we believe all who act criminally should. If
we thought Mr. Contos' death would bring back our children, we would
recommend you slay him now. However, his death cannot bring them back.
Reparation will not bring them back either, but it can shape the future.
It may bring some usefulness out of a wasted, benighted life, and add
value and perpetuity to the lives of our family who died before their
time.
"So, we ask that while in prison, we require Mr.
Contos to work gainfully, earning a specified sum of money each year.
And we ask that we require him, after paying taxes, to give that money
to an organization or organizations, which we, with the court, will
specify, that work for the understanding and treatment of children and
families, especially those subjected to violence. Further, if the court
is unable to act on this immediately because no adequate laws exist to
permit it, then we ask this court to recommend that the Massachusetts
Legislature create such a law and make it retroactive to include Mr.
Contos.
"If we do this, we can marry punishment to reparation,
making it productive, and not just momentarily satisfying. We can turn
our understandable rage, disgust and thirst for revenge and for blood,
into seeds for the future. And Mr. Contos can make expiation to the
family and to the society he so fiendishly raped. Surely, if we can
apply such principles to nations that wage aggressive war on other
nations, it is the least we can do to require it of citizens who behave
in the same way. Thank you."
Summary: Homicide. Practice, Criminal, Capital case,
Instructions to jury, Assistance of counsel, Psychiatric examination,
State of mind, Voluntariness of statement. Witness, Expert. Evidence,
Expert opinion, State of mind, Voluntariness of statement, Admissions
and confessions. Constitutional Law, Admissions and confessions, Waiver
of constitutional rights. Search and Seizure, Military reservation.
Indictments found and returned in the Superior
Court Department on November 5, 1997.
Peter Contos, center, accused of killing his girlfriend and their two
young children, sits with his attorney James Curtis, left, during his
arraignment
in Lowell District Court.