Entertainment, Fashion, Beauty, Lifestyle, News, Events, Insights and Inspirations, Share your thoughts and experiences …..

Wednesday, May 22, 2013

The woman who stabbed her ex-boyfriend 29 times, slit his neck, has asked the jury to spare her life


Arias jury: We can't agree on penalty
A A A (resize font)
 Jurors in the Jodi Arias trial say they're stuck.
After more than two hours of deliberations, they've sent out a note saying they are unable to come to a unanimous decision about whether Arias should receive the death penalty for murdering her ex-boyfriend.
Judge Sherry Stephens told them to try again.
Before sending them back to the jury room, she encouraged them to listen to each other, pinpoint areas of agreement and disagreement and ask for further guidance if they need it.
It's an approach often described as a "dynamite charge," used by judges to blast open logjams in deliberations and help jurors reach a verdict.
The jury's decision must be unanimous for Arias to be sentenced to death. In the case of a deadlock, a new jury would be chosen for this phase of the trial.
On Tuesday, Arias pleaded with jurors to spare her life.
A path of heartbreak, violence, lies and finally confessions has led the 32-year-old to where she is now -- at the mercy of jurors deciding whether or not she should live.
Earlier this month, the same jurors said Arias was "exceptionally cruel," when she stabbed Travis Alexander 29 times in 2008, slit his neck from ear to ear and shot him in the face.
They pronounced her guilty of first-degree murder on May 8.
Arias' plea to jurors Tuesday to let her live was a stark reversal from two weeks ago, when she told a journalist she preferred death to life in prison.
"I believe death is the ultimate freedom, so I'd rather just have my freedom as soon as I can get it," she told KSAZ shortly after her conviction.
But her family implored her to change her mind, she told KSAZ late Tuesday. Now she wants to spare them further heartbreak, she said.
"One of my cousins really drove it home for me and told me how much it would affect them, if I did anything to myself," she said.
Her mother pleaded with her, she claimed. "Please don't give up; please don't give up," Arias said she told her.
Haven't been following the trial? Read this
Well-planned presentation
Her life seemed to pass before her, as she delivered a slideshow presentation -- mostly of family photos -- to the jury on Tuesday. It started off with toddler pictures of herself wearing pigtails and showed several images from holidays and vacations with family members.
She read a prepared statement for nearly 20 minutes, at times crying.
She told jurors that she had been a victim of abuse as an adult and as a child. She had claimed she killed Alexander in self-defense after he hurt her, something evidence failed to substantiate.
She called his murder "the worst mistake" she'd ever made, "the worst thing I've ever done." She couldn't have imagined herself capable of such a grisly crime she told the jury.
"But I know that I was," she said. "And for that I'm going to be sorry for the rest of my life -- probably longer."
Arias pledged to make herself useful to other prisoners and humanity by performing acts of charity from behind bars, if spared. She told jurors Tuesday that she could teach people to read in prison.
She told them she would suffer for what she did.
"I'm not going to become a mother because of my own terrible choices," she said. "I won't be at my sister's wedding, when she ties the knot next year."
Arias pledged to dedicate her life to good causes.
She noted she could bring "people together in a constructive and positive way" by participating in various programs, including prisoner literacy initiatives; by her "Survivor" T-shirts, which would benefit victims of domestic violence; and by donating her hair, so it could be used to make wigs for sick children.
She claimed she was a gentle person who caught spiders in cups and took them outside rather than kill them. And she showed the jurors several pieces of her artwork.
Beginning about 90 minutes later than scheduled, Arias, 32, said she never wanted the "graphic, mortifying, horrific details (of her and Alexander's relationship) paraded out into the public arena."
"It's never been an intention of mine to malign his name or character," she said.
She acknowledged that her plea stood in contradiction with her previous publicly expressed wish to die. "Each time I said that, though I meant it," she said, "I lacked perspective."
Attorneys argue life and death
Defense attorney Jennifer Willmott argued Tuesday that Arias' life should be spared.
"We're not talking about whether or not to convict. We're talking about whether or not to kill. And so when we talk about that, it matters that she was 27 years old and she had no criminal history," she said. "It matters that she hadn't done anything wrong in her life before that."
Prosecutor Juan Martinez said pointing to Arias' artwork as evidence that her life should be spared wasn't a valid defense.
"It's an entitlement road that they want you to travel when they talk to you about the fact that she's a good artist," he said. "It doesn't mean anything. All it means is: give her special or preferential treatment."
He argued that jurors should sentence Arias to death.
"You have a duty, and that duty really means that you actually do the honest, right thing, even though it may be difficult," he said.
If Arias is given a sentence of death, she would be the fourth woman on death row in the state of Arizona.
When Alexander died

No comments:

Post a Comment