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Alex BARANYI
Jr.
Characteristics: Juvenile
(17)
Number of victims: 4
Date of murder:
January 4, 1997
Date of arrest: 5
days after
Victims profile:
Method of murder:
Strangulation / Stabbing
with knife
The void in their lives was filled with fantasy games.
In recent years, Baranyi and Anderson had become followers of so-called
goth—for gothic—subculture, in which devotees dress in black and wear
white makeup to give themselves a spectral look. Baranyi was also a fan
of Highlander, a TV series about an immortal sword-wielding hero; he
owned a sword collection himself and talked often of death. "Sometimes I
thought he might be sort of suicidal," says Dawn Kindschi, 17, an
acquaintance who had filed a complaint against Baranyi last year after
he allegedly beat her.
Despite his antisocial appearance, that was Baranyi's
only serious brush with the law—until this year. On Jan. 5 the body of
Kimberly Ann Wilson, 20, was found in a Bellevue park. She had been
clubbed with a baseball bat and strangled. When police went to the
Wilson home to deliver the news, they found Kim's parents, William, 52,
and Rose, 46, and her sister Julia, 17, bludgeoned and stabbed to death.
Acting on a tip, police brought Baranyi in for
questioning. He allegedly confessed to murdering Kim, a friend of
Anderson's, then to killing her family in the belief they might have
known she was meeting them. Later, authorities arrested Anderson as a
partner in the crime. The choice of Kim Wilson as victim may have been
arbitrary. Police say Baranyi told them he simply wanted to kill someone
because he was "in a rut." According to King County prosecutor Norm
Maleng, evidence suggests that Baranyi and Anderson, who will go on
trial in October, had committed the murders "for the sheer experience of
killing." To Kevin Wulff, principal at Bellevue High, the local outcry
over the slayings is a case of too little, too late. "We ignore [these
kids] and hope they go away," says Wulff, "and then we are horrified
when they commit these crimes."
Teen says he doesn't know why he murdered 4 members
of Bellevue family; “maybe a messed-up gene somewhere”
By Tracy Johnson - Eastside Journal
Thursday, November 05, 1998
He wasn't surprised jurors found him guilty, and he
did not seem fazed by the mandatory life sentence it means. Last night
at King County Jail, the teen was cheerfully animated, and he said he
doesn't think of himself as a cold, calculating murderer.
“It's almost like the ability to kill someone is
totally separate from someone's personality,'' he said, then
contemplated the idea for a few moments. “It's, I don't know, maybe a
messed-up gene somewhere.''
But the 19-year-old convicted quadruple-murderer said
he still can't really answer the question of why _ why did he strangle
20-year-old Kim Wilson at a Bellevue park, then sneak into her house to
help beat and stab the rest of her family?
“I have consciously tried to block out as much of
that situation as possible,'' he said. “It's a very gruesome thing, and
it's not something I want to remember... I look back and think I
couldn't have done it. It seems like it was a different person.''
Family and friends of the Wilson family sat through
Baranyi's trial in King County Superior Court for roughly three weeks,
often fighting back tears as they heard gory testimony and looked at
horrific photographs of their slain loved ones.
They fought back tears yesterday as the verdict was
read, then hurried out of the courtroom to avoid reporters. Rose
Wilson's brother, Gerald Mahoney, declined to talk about the trial.
They are people Baranyi coolly admitted he almost
never thinks about. His voice revealed not a hint of sorrow. He is not
haunted by recollections of the night he took four loved ones from them.
He said simply, “The victims' family will hate me
until the day I die. No begging for forgiveness would even be listened
to.''
Still, he isn't sure how he will be able to face
relatives of the Wilson family at his Dec. 4 sentencing. He said he had
scribbled out a few rough drafts of a speech he will make at the hearing,
but he has tossed them all out.
Baranyi wouldn't discuss many details of the murders,
worried his comments might jeopardize his case if he appeals. Clad in
his red jail uniform and making funny faces at an inmate at an adjacent
visiting window, Baranyi passed off difficult questions with a quick wit.
It took a six-man, six woman jury only three and a
half hours to find the teen guilty yesterday of the worst murder case in
Bellevue's history. He was convicted of four counts of aggravated first-degree
murder, which carries a mandatory life sentence.
The verdict concluded a three-week trial that focused
on Baranyi's mental state. Prosecutors contended -- and the jury agreed
-- the murders were carefully planned by Baranyi and his best friend,
David Anderson. They say Anderson didn't like Kim Wilson and owed her
money.
But his lawyers claimed he was mentally impaired and
following the orders of Anderson, who they say masterminded the crime.
They said Baranyi suffered from bipolar disorder, characterized by
drastic mood swings, and that he would do anything for Anderson.
Jurors decided an unhappy childhood and the influence
of a friend simply didn't justify the teen murdering Kim Wilson, her
parents, William and Rose Wilson, and her sister, Julia, 17. Juror Carl
King, 67, said Baranyi was “a neurotic, troubled young guy... But I
don't think it makes him any less guilty.''
Jurors concluded Anderson was the instigator of the
killings, but they had no doubt Baranyi willingly followed, King said.
Other jurors declined to discuss their verdict. One juror struggled for
composure when the verdict was read, and she later left the courtroom in
tears.
Anderson will stand trial in January, and his
attorneys have said he was not involved in the killings.
Last night, Baranyi said he doesn't think he'll ever
know what happened in his mind the night of the murders. He said maybe
there were a few “ingredients,'' like his attorney told jurors in his
closing argument.
He said he was depressed -- he has been for as long
as he can remember. A troubled childhood made him feel vulnerable, and
he was somewhat controlled by Anderson. He said he could only see
Anderson's hold on him in retrospect.
“When I look back at our relationship, I pretty much
think of it as him manipulating me -- and everyone else,'' he said.
The teen has been locked up for almost two years. But
it wasn't until a few days ago, he said, that he suddenly grasped the
power a jury would have over his life.
“It didn't really sink home that these 12 people on
my right are going to decide whether I live or die in prison,'' Baranyi
said.
Baranyi was vexed by his attorneys' strategy, a
diminished-capacity defense blaming the killings on a mental disorder.
He said his attorneys decided to use the strategy without giving him a
choice -- though a judge ruled otherwise.
He decided he wanted a new trial almost two weeks
ago, and said he was preparing to interrupt the proceedings by standing
up in open court to read a much-practiced speech. He said his attorneys
talked him into simply presenting the written draft to Judge Michael
Spearman.
The diminished-capacity defense looked bleak, he said,
and he wanted to simply deny his involvement in the killings. He still
would, and would even consider acting as his own attorney, if he were
ever granted another chance by a higher court.
Admitting he was there when the killings occurred,
yet blaming the crime on a mental disorder was simply a strategy he felt
was doomed.
“If I was the jury, I would have found me guilty
too,'' he said.
He laughed about parts his confession to police, in
which he spoke about murder as an “opportunity to experience something
truly phenomenal.'' He chalks some of his philosophical ruminations to
being a 17-year-old kid '' a completely different person than he says he
is now.
“That whole experience with death thing -- I can't
believe I said all that garbage,'' he said.
He also scoffs at the notion that fantasy role-playing
games or mock sword battles had anything to do with the killings. They
were merely hobbies, he said, and ones he hadn't practiced for years.
Baranyi said he and Anderson did discuss crime and
even killing a number of times, but it was all talk.
“It was never something that was real,'' he said,
until the night of killings, but he did not want to talk about when
hypothetical talk of killing became a brutal plan.
Though aggravated murder can be a capital crime,
Baranyi and Anderson could not face the death penalty because they were
only 17 when the killings occurred. The minimum punishment, however, is
life in prison without the possibility of parole.
Baranyi's attorney, Mark Flora, called the mandatory
life sentence “a flaw in the system'' for “a young man with a mental
disorder that is treatable.''
But senior deputy prosecutor Jeff Baird believes it
was the only appropriate consequence for someone who brutally killed
four people.
“I'm more interested in protecting the community than
conducting some sort of experiment with Mr. Baranyi and rehabilitation,''
Baird said.