Thursday, August 5, 2010
Sandoval guilty of first-degree murder of estranged wife
Sharon Dunn
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John Sandoval is led from the courtroom in handcuffs after being found guilty of first-degree murder on Thursday Aug. 5, 2010 in the Weld County Court House in Greeley, Colo. Sandoval, 45, was found guilty of killing his estranged wife 14 years ago. The body of Kristina Tournai-Sandoval has never been found.
ERIC BELLAMY/ebellamy@greeleytribune.com
Concluding the longest criminal trial in Weld County history, Weld District Court jurors today found John Sandoval guilty of first-degree murder in the 1995 killing of his estranged wife, Kristina Tournai-Sandoval.
Jurors returned the verdict just seven hours after they began their deliberations this morning. Sandoval was then sentenced to the mandatory term of life in prison without the possibility of parole.
For the past month, jurors listened to witnesses struggle with 15-year-old memories, new witnesses who weren't interviewed until last year, analysts who couldn't find strong DNA connections even with advanced technology, and expert testimony on dog tracking and domestic violence.
Sandoval, 45, was convicted of killing his wife on Oct. 19, 1995, after a planned meeting with her. She was never seen again, but personal items of hers were found at his home the day she disappeared, and her car was found four blocks from his home, with her wallet and cell phone in the glove box.
Police said Sandoval acted oddly after his wife's disappearance, including running from officers after coming home with a shovel and dirty clothes the night she disappeared and cleaning his fingernails before police could collect evidence. He also had what police characterized as scratch marks on his neck and chest.
Though they extensively investigated the case in 1995, prosecutors then wouldn't touch the case because Tournai-Sandoval's body had not been found. A death certificate was issued in December 2001 after a Weld District Court judge ruled there was enough evidence to believe she had died.
Police presented the case to Weld District Attorney Ken Buck for charges last summer. Sandoval was arrested at his Las Vegas home and brought to Weld County.
In closing arguments Wednesday, Chief Deputy District Attorney Matt Maillaro told jurors that when they looked at all of the evidence, the circumstances point to one inevitable conclusion, he said.
Why focus on the defendant? Maillaro asked. How could they not focus on this defendant?
Circumstantial evidence is given as much weight as physical evidence in the eyes of the law, Weld District Court Judge Gilbert Gutierrez told the jury.
Tournai-Sandoval, a new nurse at North Colorado Medical Center, was carrying on her life as one would expect of a 23-year-old woman who had left her husband and moved into her own apartment. She was buying items to start that life, carrying on a pattern of paying her bills regularly. She even dated other men. But she also was afraid of Sandoval, and told friends, family and doctors of her safety concerns, prosecutors said. Sandoval had a past, stalking women and trespassing into their homes; he'd threatened to kill her or himself if she ever left him.
On Oct. 19, 1995, she had a planned breakfast meeting with Sandoval to finalize their pending divorce and to discuss money he owed her. She told others she feared attending the meeting. She was never seen again.
Tournai-Sandoval failed to call her sister by 12:30 p.m. to assure that she was all right.
In his own closing arguments, public defender Ken Barker said there was no DNA, fingerprints, blood, murder weapon or even a body that directly tied Sandoval to the presumed death of his wife.
Physical evidence doesn't lie, it does not change stories, it does not forget, and it does not exaggerate, and it does not lose its memory, Barker told the jury, alluding to the scores of missteps he and public defender Jayme Muehlenkamp alleged in what they called a tunnel-vision investigation.