By Missy Stoddard
August 28 2004
A California man who authorities say had raped at least a half-dozen
people by age 13 pleaded guilty Friday to murdering a Lantana woman in
Palm Beach 15 years ago.
As part of the plea deal, Scott Thomas Erskine, 42, also agreed to be
interviewed by Palm Beach police about the unsolved murder of another
woman on the island in 1989, Lena Marion Teinilla.
Erskine entered his guilty plea to second-degree murder via satellite
video from San Diego, where he has been convicted of the 1993 rape,
torture and murder of two boys he had abducted. In accordance with the
plea deal struck between prosecutors and defense lawyers, Palm Beach
County Circuit Judge Lucy Chernow Brown sentenced Erskine to life in
prison for the murder of Renee Baker, 26, in June 1989.
Dressed in a teal green, jail-issued jumpsuit and flanked by Palm Beach
County Public Defender Carey Haughwout and San Diego Public Defender
Larry Ainbinder, Erskine answered questions from Brown in a monotone
voice. Baker's family members sat in the courtroom's front row,
listening intently as Palm Beach County Assistant State Attorney Angela
Miller detailed the crime.
According to Miller and information in a probable cause affidavit,
Baker's 1978 Plymouth Arrow broke down at the Albertsons supermarket on
Lake Worth Road in Lake Worth.
At the time, Erskine worked at the nearby Huneywell Fireworks stand less
than a mile away and lived in a trailer on the property.
A former co-worker of Erskine's told police that a woman named Renee
frequented the fireworks business. That same person recognized Renee
Baker when police showed him her picture.
Baker's nude body was found face down at the Wild Life Sanctuary off the
Southern Boulevard Causeway. The official cause of death was listed as
assault and drowning.
Neatly piled on the sand 66-feet away from her body lay Baker's clothing,
sandals and purse. It appeared as though she had been dragged about nine
feet from a beach area to the Intracoastal Waterway.
In took more than a decade, but in 2002 a Marlboro cigarette butt found
near the body would point to Erskine as the killer.
Erskine received a 70-year prison sentence for the 1993 rape and
attempted murder of a California woman he lured to his home. He put her
in a chokehold until she passed out, according to the affidavit. He
repeatedly sexually assaulted her until she regained consciousness and
escaped.
DNA testing in that case linked him to the rape and murder of the two
San Diego boys -- ages 9 and 13.
The bodies of the boys were found in a makeshift fort in brush along the
Otay River, according to court documents. The 13-year-old was naked from
the waist down with rope tied tightly around his neck.
The 9-year-old, also naked from the waist down, dangled from a rope
attached to a tree branch. His ankles and feet were bound and a piece of
cloth was stuck in his mouth. Both boys had been sexually brutalized.
While investigating Erskine's background, San Diego authorities traveled
to Palm Beach County, where Erskine had lived from 1988 to 1991. More
evolved DNA testing matched Erskine to the cigarette butt as well as
swabs taken from Baker's mouth.
Erskine's California public defender contacted the Palm Beach County
State Attorney's Office and offered his client's guilty plea if the
death penalty was not an option for punishment. On Friday, Erskine
pleaded guilty to second-degree murder and received a life sentence.
It's unlikely he will ever return to Florida since a California judge is
expected to sentence Erskine to death in the next few weeks for killing
the San Diego boys. A California jury already has voted in favor of the
death penalty.
As part of the Florida plea deal, Erskine has agreed to talk with Palm
Beach police about Teinilla, whose body was found by a deliveryman
between Donald Trump's Mar-a-Lago and the Bath and Tennis Club.
Teinilla, 38, of suburban Lake Worth, had been stabbed repeatedly and
strangled.
Palm Beach police Capt. Elmer Gudger was careful not to classify Erskine
as a suspect in that case, but said he's a person of interest. Teinilla
died the same year and in a similar fashion as Baker, though Gudger
declined to be more specific. Palm Beach police detectives plan to
travel to San Diego in the next few weeks to meet with Erskine.
Renee Baker's brother, Randy Baker, chose not to address Erskine at
Friday's hearing. Afterward, he explained: "I'd like to get a hold of a
gun and kill him," he said.