Found Deceased CO - Suzanne Morphew, 49, Chaffee Co, 10 May 2020 *Case dismissed w/o prejudice* *found in 2023* #115

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There is a complete transcript and video of this summary that we are going to see when this goes to trial....

Its going to be hard to explain that last answer. The only reason to say "Could've been" is if you don't know if they found your garbage or not.

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I've been a silent observer of several cases, and finally decided to participate in the discussions. Thanks to everyone for interesting insights, informative posts, and shared passions. Hope I can keep up.

I just noticed that prosecutors Hurlbert and Weiner have accepted public censure as discipline for their roles in the initiation of a criminal investigation into Judge Lama.

Prosecutors in Barry Morphew Murder Case Publicly Censured
Deputy District Attorneys Receive Censure for Role in Morphew Prosecution

I do not know details: specifically, I see nothing in the article related to Morphew's civil claims against them. Hopefully details will come out in subsequent coverage.

IIRC, IE's original complaint was filed against 7 prosecutors:
  • Linda Stanley
  • Jeff Lindsey
  • Mark Hurlbert
  • Aaron Pembeleton
  • Dan Edwards
  • Bob Weiner
  • Grant Grosegebauer
I heard somewhere that Dan Edwards may have accepted private disciplinary action by agreement (source?), but I never heard what happened to Lindsey, Pembeleton, and Grosegebauer. Does anyone know?
 
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I've been a silent observer of several cases, and finally decided to participate in the discussions. Thanks to everyone for interesting insights, informative posts, and shared passions. Hope I can keep up.

I just noticed that prosecutors Hurlbert and Weiner have accepted public censure as discipline for their roles in the initiation of a criminal investigation into Judge Lama.

Prosecutors in Barry Morphew Murder Case Publicly Censured
Deputy District Attorneys Receive Censure for Role in Morphew Prosecution

I do not know details: specifically, I see nothing in the article related to Morphew's civil claims against them. Hopefully details will come out in subsequent coverage.

IIRC, IE's original complaint was filed against 7 prosecutors:
  • Linda Stanley
  • Jeff Lindsey
  • Mark Hurlbert
  • Aaron Pembeleton
  • Dan Edwards
  • Bob Weiner
  • Grant Grosegebauer
I heard somewhere that Dan Edwards may have accepted private disciplinary action by agreement (source?), but I never heard what happened to Lindsey, Pembeleton, and Grosegebauer. Does anyone know?

Thanks for the quoted link, and welcome to WS @Tragg .

Public censure by Hurlbert and Weiner was essentially a plea agreement by the attorneys, and the hearing scheduled from Oct. 9-18 in front of the presiding disciplinary judge will be vacated. Personally, I think this was a smart move by both given the initial Complaint demanded they be disbarred. Yes, confirming Edwards did reach a similar settlement with OARC prior to Stanley's hearing. IMO, Stanley was likely offered a similar opportunity to settle and and avoid a hearing, likely included suspension of her license for a year or two, knowing it would cause her to resign being DA which was the ultimate goal, but instead she was defiant to the end. Another bad decision! Personally, I don't think it bodes well for the actual hearing process. I think it's further confirmed when the panel can't make a hearing decision following their own statutory timeline.

As for Jeff Lindsey, he probably had an adequate argument with OARC that the his limited tenure in Chaffee County should show the allegations against him did not have merit.

And forgive me as I delay comment on Pembleton and Groseebauer as I have brain fade on these names today. MOO :oops:
 
Burying Unexpected Items in the Backyard? Thinking like BM?

3 yrs ago, @Ontario Mom reacted to BM burying furniture in backyard at Indiana house, saying --->
"That's just so dang weird.
"I mean, who the heck buries furniture and plants flipping alfalfa on top of it?
"NO one, that's who."

@Ontario Mom I found someone who might do that, seems to think (somewhat) like BM.
A poster on reddit.com landscaping sub asks, w pic: "30+ yo decking. Can I bury and plant on top or does it need removal? I needed to do something with it already. Now that the tree guys have flattened it, the spouse is getting jumpy. Bury or remove?"

So there you have it, @Ontario Mom, another dude who wants to bury unexpected stuff in yard & then plant over it. Like BM??? Wow!

(BTW, responses said basically, Bury it, what the what? Haul that stuff off. One responder said, I bought a house and when I went to till a garden into the backyard, found buried plastic bags of kitchen waste, kids clothes, a completely dismantled clothes dryer, glass and rotten wood.
Maybe he bought one of BM's previous homes??? Possible??? ;) LOL, but IDK.
_____________________________________
Thread # 86, Oct 12, 2021 Post by @Ontario Mom
@sk716 (TYVM :) ) provided the ref in AA---footnote (#55, Pg 53 of 129)
 
Burying Unexpected Items in the Backyard? Thinking like BM?

3 yrs ago, @Ontario Mom reacted to BM burying furniture in backyard at Indiana house, saying --->
"That's just so dang weird.
"I mean, who the heck buries furniture and plants flipping alfalfa on top of it?
"NO one, that's who."

@Ontario Mom I found someone who might do that, seems to think (somewhat) like BM.
A poster on reddit.com landscaping sub asks, w pic: "30+ yo decking. Can I bury and plant on top or does it need removal? I needed to do something with it already. Now that the tree guys have flattened it, the spouse is getting jumpy. Bury or remove?"

So there you have it, @Ontario Mom, another dude who wants to bury unexpected stuff in yard & then plant over it. Like BM??? Wow!

(BTW, responses said basically, Bury it, what the what? Haul that stuff off. One responder said, I bought a house and when I went to till a garden into the backyard, found buried plastic bags of kitchen waste, kids clothes, a completely dismantled clothes dryer, glass and rotten wood.
Maybe he bought one of BM's previous homes??? Possible??? ;) LOL, but IDK.
_____________________________________
Thread # 86, Oct 12, 2021 Post by @Ontario Mom
@sk716 (TYVM :) ) provided the ref in AA---footnote (#55, Pg 53 of 129)
Imagine the effort, to bury furniture etc.
Take it to the tip: low cost, BUT BM can't afford that!!!
Here, we have hard rubbish collections, once a year, at no cost, run by the council.
Folk leave stacks of used items out the front for collection.
 
In my experience I think it's not uncommon to bury some kinds of stuff if you have a large property

e.g bricks, broken up concrete etc can be used as fill

Obviously you don't bury any waste as it can get in the water table - i.e nothing metal, plastics etc

IMO
 
Imagine the effort, to bury furniture etc.
Take it to the tip: low cost, BUT BM can't afford that!!!
Here, we have hard rubbish collections, once a year, at no cost, run by the council.
Folk leave stacks of used items out the front for collection.
BM was so cheap and messy, plus he liked the excuse of having to go to the dumpster at night according to Suzanne. ;)

JMO
 
In my experience I think it's not uncommon to bury some kinds of stuff if you have a large property

e.g bricks, broken up concrete etc can be used as fill

Obviously you don't bury any waste as it can get in the water table - i.e nothing metal, plastics etc

IMO
Agree about bricks and concrete, but burying a couch? That is bizarre to me.

JMO
 
An Effort for Most? Not for BM.
Imagine the effort, to bury furniture etc.
Take it to the tip: low cost, BUT BM can't afford that!!!....
sbm. @tmar TY.
First reading about the furniture burial, I thought---
Hard to imagine that SM had furniture in their Indiana house that was so rickety that GoodWill or a thrift store would give it a pass. Or that paying the landfill drop-fee would be a burden, except in BM's mind.

But ^ post made me realize, likely BM saw this as an EXCUSE to crank up his front-loader and do some digging to show off his HE-MAN SKILLS at home for his wife & dau's.
imo
 
Judge Domenico summarized the uncontested facts articulated in the arrest affidavit as follows. My question for long term observers of this case is: Did he miss anything?

1. Macy Morphew’s admission that her parents argued a lot and that she feared they would separate or divorce.

2. Mrs. Morphew’s sister, Melinda Baumunk, described Plaintiff as one who lives a double life, a liar, an adulterer, a bully, one that has to have control, cunning, fools people a lot, and treats his wife and daughters as trophies.

3. Mrs. Morphew texted her sister two days before she disappeared: “Its hard dealing with the harsh abrasiveness and having to show respect. He’s also been abusive, emotionally and physically. There’s so much...I went thru a period of acceptance and I feel more angry now. Anger at what I’ve allowed.”

4. Mrs. Morphew kept a list of grievances about her husband on the notes application on her phone, which included “Phys abuse,” “Stalking Sheila and me in house without telling,” “Chase me around resort and threatened,” “Took phone,” “Not safe alone with you. Can’t be trusted,” “Oppressive,” and “Accused me of bf."

5. Mrs. Morphew texted her husband a few days before she disappeared: “I’m done. I could care less what you’re up to and have been for years. We just need to figure this out civilly.”

6.. Plaintiff declined to submit to a polygraph examination regard- ing his memory of the events leading up to his wife’s disappearance and his alibi.

7. Investigators observed scratches on Plaintiff’s upper left arm three days after his wife disappeared.

8. Plaintiff thought it was “very suspicious” that his wife would not tell him about some of her communications, even if he did not know she was involved in a sexual relationship with another man.

9. Plaintiff’s conflicting statements about whether he went on a hike to Fooses Lake with his wife the day before her disappearance.

10. Plaintiff’s conflicting statements about whether he used his tran- quilizer or darts in Colorado, including his admissions that “I’ve shot two deer with my tranq gun, ‘cause I used to raise deer, and I collect horns” and that “I’ve shot deer from that little breezeway from between the garage and the laundry room.”

11. Plaintiff’s admission that he used BAM, Telazol, and Xylazine as tranquilizers and that he brought these chemicals, which he knew to be controlled substances, from Indiana.

12. Retired Colorado Parks & Wildlife Field Veterinarian Lisa Wolfe’s surprise that a civilian would have these animal tranquilizers.

13. Plaintiff’s admission that he kept the tranquilizer chemicals in vials and injected them into darts himself.

14. Mrs. Morphew’s “spy pen” recorded her husband listening to several episodes of “Forensic Files”— including three episodes about murders — during a drive to Pueblo less than two months before she disappeared.

15. Plaintiff was originally scheduled to pick up an employee to drive to Broomfield for a landscaping job around 5:30 p.m. on the day his wife disappeared but instead left at 5:00 a.m., twelve hours earlier than planned.

16. Plaintiff was seen “carrying unknown items in his hands and placing items into two separate trash cans located on the edge of the McDonald’s lot between 10:19 AM and 10:41 AM” on May 10, 2020, roughly six hours after Mrs. Morphew was last seen alive.

17. Plaintiff was the last person to see his wife alive.

18. Plaintiff could not recall the items that were in the trash bags, stating that they were “probably old clothes” or boots. He could also not recall why he pushed the trash to the extent that his shoulder was in the trash can.

19. Plaintiff suggested saying “I don’t recall” was code for not wanting to tell the truth but himself didn’t recall a number of critical facts surrounding his wife’s disappearance.

20. Plaintiff began to liquidate the family’s assets within a month of his wife’s disappearance.

21. Plaintiff was an avid hunter and a professional landscaper and may have possessed the tools and expertise necessary to kill his wife, bury her body, and dispose of the evidence.

22. Plaintiff became intimately involved in a relationship with another woman in the months immediately following his wife’s dis- appearance (before her body had been discovered).

23. Mrs. Morphew’s father felt it was odd that neither of his grand-daughters or Plaintiff were home on Mother’s Day, when Mrs. Morphew disappeared, and that it was unusual that Plaintiff would choose to work on the Sunday of Mother’s Day when he seldom worked on Sundays.
 
For comparison, here is an article describing Judge Murphy's findings on probable cause and bail eligibility:

SUZANNE MORPHEW MURDER TO PROCEED TO TRIAL, BARRY MORPHEW BAIL SET AT $500,000

Posted by Jan Wondra | Sep 18, 2021 | Chaffee County, News, Public Safety & Justice, Salida

On Friday afternoon, Sept. 17, a series of decisions by District 11 Judge Patrick Murphy set the course of the murder trial for Barry Morphew, in the disappearance and presumed murder of his wife Suzanne Morphew.

The afternoon included the pre-trial final arguments by the prosecutor and the defense, as well as the judge’s ruling regarding “proof evident presumption great”, a legal term that requires the judge to rule on whether there is enough evidence to presume the defendant is guilty. Murphy established that a trial will be held, and set a $500,000 bail for Morphew, who will be required to remain in Chaffee County and wear an ankle monitor.

The judge explained to the court that the hearing was what is known as a probable cause hearing and that he is aware that the case has drawn national attention. “The defense has argued the case cannot be bound over for trial because there is no body … based on the idea that if a body is not presented, then there can be no crime.”

“There is no Colorado case law on this,” he went on to say. “I have to resolve all inferences in favor of the people. Based on her disappearance; that is that Suzanne Morphew has been murdered by her husband Barry Morphew.”

“This is the inference put forward by the DA’s office and I must give preference to this. Second, there is no recovered body. Third, Colorado courts have rejected the corpus delicti argument in favor of probable cause … in that case … the court said the confession itself was the reliable evidence … so the body didn’t have to be shown.”

Probable Cause Established

After listening to the legal arguments, Murphy said he found there was enough evidence for the case to go to a jury trial. “I believe I can find probable cause in a homicide case, even in this case, without a body … that a murder has been committed and probable cause that the defendant has been the one to do it.”

He found probable cause for Charge 1, first-degree murder, and Charge 2, tampering with a deceased body.

Upon the request of the defense attorneys, he set the four-week trial date to run from May 3, through June 1, 2022, confirming this long wait time with Morphew, who has a right to a speedy trial (normally considered to be within a six-month timeframe).

Morphew had quietly entered a plea of “not guilty” prior to the start of the proceedings.

The Judge reminded the court that he applied the lowest standard of proof in the U.S. Court system. “There is a reasonable belief that the defendant may have committed the crimes charged. I must draw all reasonable inferences in favor of the prosecution. The evidence to support a conviction of the crime is not necessary at this stage of the hearings.” He reminded the court that evidence that wouldn’t normally be allowed, may be allowed at a preliminary hearing such as the one that was concluding that day.

In his detailed explanation of his finding of probable cause Judge Murphy pointed out that while there is no body, the facts appear to point that Suzanne Murphew is deceased, not missing or hiding:

1. No one has heard or seen her since May 9, 2020, despite huge media coverage…she has not been sighted or found, and she used her phone a lot.

2. Her camelback and sunglasses were in her car and she always rode her bike with them.

3. She was a stay-at-home mother to raise her kids and had no outside source of income from which she could hide money to use it to disappear.

4. She had received an inheritance, but it was used to buy the home. (Morphew had said that “he was Suzanne’s ATM” indicating he was in control of the money.)

5. She always had her bible, her journal, and the book “The Courage to Change” together. But her journal was missing and evidence of the journal was found burned in the fireplace.

6. Her purse, driver’s license, credit cards, and cash were left.

7. Most important, added Murphy, she was a dedicated and caring mother. “This is not in dispute … she said ‘Once Macy is gone – I won’t be able to do it’…. it would make little sense that she would absent herself from her kids’ lives, or of the rest of her family or friends.”

7. A cap of a tranquilizer needle was found in the home’s dryer along with Morphew’s clothes and Suzanne’s phone’s GPS on Saturday afternoon around the time that Barry Morphew returned home, showed her circling the home’s yard in a manner similar to the behavior of large wildlife that have been tranquilized, just after her last known phone contact.

Murphey reiterated a few key facts about Barry Morphew’s behavior. Among them:

8. Mr. Morphew arrived home at 2:44 p.m. on Saturday, May 9. Three minutes later his phone is put in airplane mode until 10:17 p.m. “That is 7.5 hours – that is ample time to dispose of Suzanne’s body,” said Murphy.

9. On Sunday, May 10, Morphew was up and doing something pre-dawn, GPS tracking showed that included driving to the areas where Suzanne’s bike and bike helmet were found later that day.

10. In fact, he made a left turn on CR 225, which he claimed was due to following a bull elk to see where the antlers dropped. But the Chaffee Sheriff’s Dept. found that at the time of day when he left it was pitch dark, and elk shed their antlers long before May.

11. Morphew then drove to Broomfield and made at least five stops that he said were stops to discard trash, but he didn’t tell law enforcement about the stops when questioned, part of a history of changing his story as time went on.

The Meaning of “proof evident presumption great”

While the court applied the lowest standard of proof to proceed with the trial, a legal term with a weighty technical meaning became extremely important to the second portion of the hearing; “proof evident presumption great”.

In Colorado, a defendant has an absolute right to bail except in prosecutions where the proof is evident or presumption of guilt is great. But unlike a hearing, the probable cause hearing there is no presumption in favor of the prosecution – the weight given to evidence or witnesses is solely at the discretion of the court and impacts whether bail will be considered.

So what does that term actually mean? The standard of proof for “proof evident” is greater than probable cause, but less than what is required for a conviction. “It is more than reasonable to believe that the defendant may have committed the crime but less than the proof necessary to convict in a court trial,” explained Murphy. “This is the same standard that courts use in Colorado to terminate parental rights.”

Citing court cases for decisions related to proof evident, he explained, “bail shall be denied when the circumstances disclosed indicate a fair likelihood that the defendant would be convicted at a trial with the highest standard – proof beyond a reasonable doubt … I find that the answer to that question is no. Is it possible that he would be convicted? Yes. But is it likely that he would be convicted? I find no.”

He laid out the prosecution evidence again, (no direct evidence – no one saw him murder her, no one heard any disturbance, he hasn’t admitted anything) he also noted that the home surveillance was disabled. The cameras were off. The DVR hasn’t been found. There is no forensic evidence, no blood in the house, garage, property, or in his truck, in his bobcat, or at the hotel.

Of the three possible scenarios, the judge said that it was possible that either Morphew murdered her and disposed of the body, or that someone unknown took Suzanne and murdered her. “I think it is unlikely that she intentionally disappeared.”

He pointed out that “I find the evidence and presence of unknown DNA in the glove box of her car, and that this person has committed other sexual assaults to be important.” He noted that the DNA found is linked to three other sexual assaults; two in Arizona and one in Chicago.

“This is particularly significant – it’ doesn’t prove that he is innocent, or that someone else did it. Therefore: “proof is not evident, nor is the presumption great. Because I have found the prosecution has not met their burden, the court is obligated by the Colorado Constitution to set bail.”

The prosecution asked for a $10 million bail, and the defense asked for bail to be set at $25,000. The judge settled on $500 thousand bail, with the surrender of passport and firearms, no contact with a list of witnesses in the case, and Morphew to wear an ankle monitor. Bail paperwork will be processed, Monday, Sept. 20.

The defense argued for him to be allowed to live in Gunnison near one of his daughters. ” He can’t live in Chaffee County. He’s a public spectacle living here, he probably can’t live a normal life. He has just been charged. He is presumed innocent.”

The judge denied that, saying Morphew is to reside in Chaffee County while awaiting trial and not travel outside the county except for day trips to connect with his Denver-based attorneys adding, “The likely sentence, given the nature of the charge if convicted — the sentence will be life without parole.”

In a final move, the defense asked Judge Murphey to seal the prosecutor’s affidavit and to place a gag order on the prosecution, saying that District Attorney’s office has been talking with the media and giving interviews in a manner that could prejudice the case.

Murphy set a 1:30 p.m.Nov. 9 hearing regarding the last request and noted that the affidavit with a few personal privacy portions redacted, would be posted on the Colorado judicial court website by Monday, Sept. 20.
 

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