Click Here

U.S. Fugitives Caught in Mexico Spared Death Penalty

Cpl. Cesar A. Laurean

A methamphetamine dealer who gunned down a deputy during a traffic stop in Southern California. A man in Arizona who killed his ex-girlfriend's parents and brother and snatched his children. A man who suffocated his baby daughter and left her body in a toolbag on an expressway overpass near Chicago.

Ordinarily, these would be death penalty cases. But these men fled to Mexico, thereby escaping the possibility of execution.

The reason: Mexico won't send anyone back to the United States unless the U.S. gives assurances it won't seek the death penalty – a 30-year-old policy that rankles some American prosecutors and enrages victims' families.

"We find it extremely disturbing that the Mexican government would dictate to us, in Arizona, how we would enforce our laws at the same time they are complaining about our immigration laws," said Barnett Lotstein, special assistant to the prosecutor in Maricopa County, Arizona, which includes Phoenix.

"Even in the most egregious cases, the Mexican authorities say, `No way,' and that's not justice. That's an interference of Mexican authorities in our judicial process in Arizona."

It may about to happen again: A Camp Lejeune Marine accused of murdering a pregnant comrade in Jacksonville and burning her remains in his backyard is believed to have fled to Mexico.

Prosecutors said they have not decided whether to seek the death penalty. But if the Marine is captured in Mexico, capital punishment will be off the table.

Local authorities and the FBI are working with Mexican law enforcement to hunt down Cpl. Cesar Armando Laurean, a 21-year-old naturalized U.S. citizen born in Mexico. He is accused of killing 20-year-old Lance Cpl. Maria Lauterbach in mid-December, months after she accused him of rape.

Wanted posters and information on Laurean have been distributed to the Mexican media.

"I'm very opposed to that. This murder occurred in Onslow County," Onslow County District Attorney Dewey Hudson said Thursday. "We have laws in our state and why another country could tell me what the results should be in this case, it's not something that I like."

Fugitives trying to escape the long arm of the law have been making a run for the border ever since frontier days, a practice romanticized in countless Hollywood Westerns.

Mexico routinely returns fugitives to the U.S. to face justice. But under a 1978 treaty with the U.S., Mexico, which has no death penalty, will not extradite anyone facing possible execution. To get their hands on a fugitive, U.S. prosecutors must agree to seek no more than life in prison.

Other countries, including France and Canada, also demand such "death assurances." But the problem is more common with Mexico, since it is often a quick drive from the crime scene for a large portion of the United States.

"If you can get to Mexico - if you have the means - it's a way of escaping the death penalty," said Issac Unah, a University of North Carolina political science professor.

The Justice Department said death assurances from foreign countries are fairly common, but it had no immediate numbers. State Department officials said Mexico extradited 83 suspects to the U.S. in 2006. Most were wanted on drug or murder charges.

The U.S. government typically pays more attention to those entering the country from Mexico than it does to those trying to leave the U.S. But Texas authorities have begun making checks of vehicles and drivers heading south on the 25 international bridges that connect the state to Mexico.

The initiative, announced in October, was originally intended to catch drug smugglers taking cash or stolen cars into Mexico, but "we would hope it would be a deterrent for fugitives" as well, said Allison Castle, a spokeswoman for Gov. Rick Perry.

Also recently, prosecutors in Dallas pledged not to seek the death penalty if Mexico extradites Ernesto Reyes, a man accused of killing and burning the body of a University of North Texas student last year. That extradition request is still pending.

John Walsh, host of TV's long-running "America's Most Wanted," which plans to devote Saturday's episode to the Lauterbach/Laurean case, said the delays and death-penalty compromises needed to get fugitives returned can be heartbreaking for victims' families

"It's not about revenge. It's not so much about closure. It's about justice," he said.

Lotstein, the prosecutor's assistant in Phoenix, said the county has agreed to drop the death penalty in a number of cases: "The option we have is absolutely no justice, or partial justice."



1 Comment


Golo

Welcome to GOLO, where WRAL.com visitors can comment on stories and create profile pages, blogs and photo galleries.

You must be a registered WRAL.com user to use these tools. Click here to register or log in.

View Comments View Comments

  1. Gov. Beverly Perdue
    10 questions: Gov. Bev Perdue

    Gov. Bev Perdue answers your questions about pay cuts, the Easley investigation, illegal immigrants, taxes, the lottery and much more.

  2. NASA Astronaut Bill McArthur Jr.
    10 questions: NASA astronaut

    NASA Astronaut Bill McArthur Jr. answers your questions about what it's like to walk in space, why he loves to fly and much more.

  3. Auctioneer Ben Farrell
    10 questions: Auctioneer

    Auctioneer Ben Farrell answers your questions about talking fast, selling homes and how auctioneers are paid.

Experian Credit Center

Average Credit Score: 678. See Yours Free!
1. Make sure possible inaccuracies aren't hurting your credit
2. Detect potential identity theft
3. Stay on top of your credit without hurting your score

See your Free Credit Report online in seconds when you sign up for a free 30-day credit monitoring trial!

  1. APTOPIX Austria Weather
    Photos of the week

    The snow-covered Wilder Kaiser, part of the Alps, is reflected in Lake Schwarzsee in Austria. It's among the best photos taken by Associated Press…

  2. The Last Kiss
    Photos: Your veterans

    WRAL viewers share pictures of their veterans in their lives.

  3. BRITAIN_ELTON__JOHN
    The week in entertainment

    A look at the top entertainment headlines this week through the lenses of Associated Press photographers.

  4. People_Mo_Nique
    Entertainment: Winners and losers

    A look at the winners and losers this week in the entertainment world.

  5. Raleigh fall colors 11/5/09_02
    Photos: Raleigh fall colors

    Watch the leaves change colors throughout the fall at 10 iconic locations in Raleigh.

advertisement