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John MARTINI
Sr.
Newark: Court Upholds Death
Sentence
The New York Times
July 26, 2006
In what is considered the final appeal available to
a man convicted of kidnapping and murdering a Fair Lawn businessman 17
years ago, the State Supreme Court upheld his death sentence yesterday
in a 6-to-1 ruling. But a state moratorium on the death penalty was
imposed in January.
The convict, John Martini Sr., 75, killed the
businessman, Irving Flax, in 1989 even though Mr. Flax’s wife paid
$25,000 of the $100,000 ransom. Mr. Martini was later convicted of
three other murders.
John Martini was sentenced
to die for the 1989 kidnap and murder of businessman Irving Flax of
Fair Lawn, and since 1995 he has asked the courts to permit him to
stop his appeals and bring on his execution date because he found
prison existence intolerable.
However, with less
than 6 weeks to go before his appointment with the death chamber,
Martini changed his mind and decided he does not want to die,
resuming his appeals.
Since his death
sentence, Martini has been convicted of 3 other murders in Arizona
and Philadelphia.
In January of 1987,
Martini allegedly killed his aunt and her husband at their home in
Atlantic City, although these are crimes for which he was never
brought to trial.
He subsequently
divorced his wife, Alice, and leaves his home in Glendale, Ariz.,
where he worked in a bar, to return to the Bronx, his birthplace.
In November of
1988, Martini killed Teresa Marie Dempster, 27, a suspected drug
supplier, and salesman David Richard Uhl, 42, near Glendale.
In January of 1989,
Martini abducted warehouse executive Irving Flax in Fair Lawn,
evidently an acquaintance from years past, then collected $25,000 in
ransom from his wife, Marilyn, at a Paramus diner.
The following day
Flax was found dead in a car in a mall parking lot, shot 3 times in
the head. Martini and a girlfriend inexplicably remained in the
immediate area, where 2 days later they were recognized and arrested
by Fort Lee police at a local motel.
In November of
1990, Martini was tried for this murder. He did not deny the crime
but blamed drug addiction. Alice came from Arizona to testify. He
was convicted and sentenced to death in Dec. 1990.
In April of 1991 a
jury convicted girlfriend Therese Afdahl of felony murder and other charges in Flax's death but not
of the maximum murder charge. Part of her defense was the claim
Martini had beaten her and intimidated her. She was sentenced to 50
years.
In August of 1992,
Martini pled guilty in Arizona to the Dempster-Uhl murders in a deal
to spare him the death penalty. He got 50 years.
In 1994, Martini
was moved to 114-year-old Holmesburg prison in Philadelphia to stand
trial for a 4th murder charge. It is there he decided death was
preferable to life behind bars.
In October of 1995,
he told Superior Court Judge Bruce Gaeta, who handled his trial,
that he wants to die and wants all appeals stopped. A psychiatrist
subsequently testified Martini was competent to understand the
choice he made.
In Nov. of 1997,
Martini was convicted in Philadelphia of the execution-style murder
of Anna Mary "Paulie" Duvall, with whom he had business dealings, in
1977 near the airport.
John Martini
On Monday morning,
January 23, 1989, Marilyn Flax kissed her husband Irving goodbye as
he left for his job as supervisor in a warehouse in Secaucus. She
never saw him again. Instead, she received a telephone call from a
man who called himself “Tony”, who told her that he had kidnapped
her husband and was holding him for ransom. Despite threats to her
life and her family’s lives by the man on the phone if she called
the police, Mrs. Flax contacted authorities. The FBI advised her to
comply with the ransom demand, and formulated a plan to follow the
kidnapper after he picked up the money.
That evening, Mrs.
Flax delivered the ransom at the Forum Diner in Paramus, but the
kidnapper managed to elude the pursuit by the FBI. Although “Tony”
had promised to release her husband if she complied with his demands,
Mrs. Flax waited in vain all that night.
The next morning,
Irving Flax was found, sitting in his car, at the Garden State Plaza
in Paramus. He had been slain, execution style, with three bullets
to the back of his head. Law enforcement authorities manage to link
the actions of the kidnapper to a wanted fugitive from Arizona named
John Martini. Martini and his girlfriend, Theresa Afdahl, were on
the run from two murders they committed three months earlier in
Arizona, and had been living in New Jersey under assumed identities.
On Wednesday night,
January 25, 1989, Martini and Afdahl were arrested when they
attempted to leave a motel in Fort Lee, in possession of the ransom
money and a gun. Martini was charged with capital murder here in New
Jersey and in Arizona.
While awaiting trial,
Martini threatened his lawyer and Afdahl’s lawyer, causing the
appointment of new counsel by the court. He also planned two
separate escape attempts from the Bergen County jail, and nearly
succeeded in the second attempt when he bribed a guard to smuggle in
diamond wire so that he could cut the bars in the jail’s law library.
Martini was subsequently moved to state prison pending his capital
trial.
Eventually, Martini
was tried in Bergen County, convicted and given the death penalty by
a jury. While on death row, he was flown to Arizona where he pled
guilty to the shooting deaths of Theresa Dempster and David Uhl. He
was later brought to Philadelphia where he was tried and found
guilty of the murder of Anna “Polly” Duval, a killing he committed
back in 1978.
ProDeathPenaltyNJ.com
Killer Was F.B.I. Informer, Newspaper Says
The New York Times
Friday, August 27, 1999
John Martini, the
convicted murderer who declined until recently to file an appeal that
would postpone his execution, was a longtime Government informer, a
newspaper reported today.
The jurors who imposed the death sentence on Mr.
Martini were never told that he had worked with the F.B.I. for two
decades, The Philadelphia Inquirer reported.
In New Jersey, a jury in a capital case first
decides on guilt or innocence and then decides in a separate
proceeding whether to impose the death penalty. Among the factors the
jury can consider in deciding whether to impose the death penalty is
the defendant's character, and cooperation with law enforcement
officials can be cited as a mitigating factor warranting a less severe
sentence than death.
Government records show that Mr. Martini, a truck
driver, gave Federal investigators information on mob-related thefts
in the trucking industry in northern New Jersey. The F.B.I. dropped
him as an informer in 1986 after he made what the agency believed was
a false claim about a money-laundering scheme.
In 1990, Mr. Martini was convicted of killing a
warehouse manager, Irving Flax, in 1989.
Mr. Martini's role as a Government informer began
in the mid-1960's after he was convicted of stealing a load of women's
underwear in Hudson County, The Inquirer reported.
The newspaper, citing information from F.B.I.
reports, said Mr. Martini provided agents with information about mob-related
truck thefts and hijackings and the location of contraband in New
Jersey and New York.
It is unclear how valuable Mr. Martini's tips were
and whether the authorities compensated him by not prosecuting him for
crimes he was suspected of committing during that period.
Investigators questioned Mr. Martini about his
involvement in the slayings of four of his relatives between 1981 and
1987. He was never charged, and those killings remain unsolved.
The New Jersey Office of the Public Defender, which
is representing Mr. Martini in his appeal, said it would not comment
on the newspaper report.
Mr. Martini's decision to appeal was a recent one.
Throughout the 1990's, he said that prison life disgusted him and that
he wanted to be executed.
After the mandatory state appeals process was
completed and Mr. Martini's conviction upheld this summer, the New
Jersey Department of Corrections scheduled his execution for Sept. 22.
But two weeks ago, a nun visiting Mr. Martini at
the New Jersey State Prison in Trenton persuaded him to allow lawyers
to file further appeals in Federal court. On Wednesday, the Department
of Corrections canceled the death warrant pending the outcome of the
Federal appeals.
Execution Date Canceled For Convicted Killer
The New York Times
Thursday, August 26, 1999
The State Supreme Court yesterday issued an order
to formally cancel the Sept. 22 execution for a convicted killer who,
until two weeks ago, had maintained that he wanted to die.
After speaking to a prison chaplain, the killer,
John Martini, changed his mind about being willing to die and decided
to have the Public Defender's office file a Federal appeal. Previously,
Mr. Martini in effect had been volunteering to be the first man to be
executed in New Jersey in 36 years.
The State Supreme Court on July 27 denied Mr.
Martini's third and final state appeal. He then said he wanted no more
appeals filed and a death warrant was issued.
Mr. Martini, 69, who is in poor health, has been
trying for four years to end his appeals, calling prison life
intolerable. It took him about two weeks to change his mind. One of
his lawyers, Alan Zegas, said Mr. Martini, a four-time convicted
killer, had a change of heart after a meeting with the prison's
Catholic chaplain, Sister Elizabeth Gnam, who opposes capital
punishment.
Mr. Martini was sentenced to die in 1990 for the
kidnap murder of a Fair Lawn warehouse manager. He has since been
convicted of three other murders in Arizona and Pennsylvania.