Video news coverage at the link...
-------------- • -------------- • --------------
CBS4.comJul 21, 2010 11:40 pm US/EasternMan Found Guilty In Parents' Murder For Hire PlotChristopher Sutton Masterminded A Plot To Murder His Parents
His Father Said This Is A "Lose-lose" SituationReporting: Gary Nelson
Christopher Sutton cries on the stand, accused of master-minding the shooting that killed his mother, Susan, and left his father, John, wounded and blinded for life. CBSMIAMI (CBS4) — A Miami-Dade jury has found Christopher Sutton guilty of plotting a 2004 murder that left his mother dead and his father blind in their Coral Gables house.
Wednesday night the jury found the 31-year-old man guilty of first degree murder and attempted murder charges.
The jury appeared to be in no rush to judgment. On Tuesday they asked to hear the call Sutton's father John made to 911 the night he and his wife were shot in their beds. The 911 call was the first exhibit entered into evidence during the 2 week trial.
The jury started to deliberate just before 4 p.m. Tuesday after a full day of closing arguments. They deliberated for about 4 hours before going home for the night.
Christopher's father John Sutton was upset but satisfied that justice was served.
"This is unfortunately a lose-lose situation, but at least it's completed," Sutton told the media after the verdict was read.
Sutton believes his son has stolen his faith in the past, and had been planning to kill him for nine years in the past. He said his son previously tried loosening the wheel on his car.
"This is a series of plans and schemes that came together and all fell into that particular awful night, five years and 11 months ago," he said.
Christopher Sutton declined to address the court after the verdict, or even look at his father while the elder Sutton spoke.
"I am convinced that justice in this system will always prevail, and prevailed here," said his father.
Christopher's sister Melissa also thanked the court while sobbing: "Thank you for ending all of this; it needs to be over."
But the loudest sob came from the father of the hit man, Mitch Kopp: "I am so sorry my son had anything to do with this."
And despite the tragedy his family life has become, John Sutton forgives: "Mr. Kopp Sr. did not do it, he did not do the shooting, probably as I did, he did the best he could with what he had."
Prosecutors staked their case on Sutton's motive being greed, and anger over being sent away to a reform school when he was younger.
"What motive did Christopher Sutton have to want both his parents dead? Money," said assistant state attorney Carin Kahgan. "That man, the defendant, had profound anger, hatred, and greed. His parents were worth nothing more to him than a means to get money."
"The only person in this room with the motive to murder John and Susan Sutton is the defendant, Christopher Sutton," Assistant State Attorney Kathleen Hoague said.
Kahgan recounted the testimony of Sutton's former girlfriend, Julie Driscoll, who said he told her "over and over" about his desire to kill his parents. "He went over how much money they had. He said his parents deserved to die. You heard him say that," Kahgan told jurors.
Defense attorney Bruce Fleisher cast the case differently, saying the confessed killer worked alone in a botched, drug-crazed robbery.
"We want you to judge your verdicts on the facts of the case," Fleisher said. "We want you to judge your verdict on what happened in this case."
Fleisher said the confessed gunman, Garrett Kopp, lied about his involvement to keep from going to the electric chair.
"He sat here and he told you exactly what happened. He gave Christopher up to save himself," he said. "Is there enough evidence in this case to convict my client? The answer is no," Fleisher said.
Fleisher said Julie Driscoll's story was elicited by cops who threatened her with murder charges if she didn't incriminate Sutton. "They coerced her; they forced her. They threatened her for 14 hours before she gave them what they wanted to hear."
The defense also tried to raise doubt in the prosecution's case by calling a Miami-Dade homicide detective who acknowledged that investigators thought business enemies might have been behind the shooting and murder.
Lt. Rosanna Cordero-Stutz said John Sutton, an attorney, told police that he thought he and his wife may have been targeted by someone from whom he had won a big court settlement.
The gunman allegedly hired by Christopher Sutton testified against him last week. Garrett Kopp, who has pleaded guilty and is serving a 30-year sentence, said he entered the Sutton home on the night of August 22, 2004 with the intention of shooting and killing them as part of a plot devised by Sutton.
Prosecutors say Christopher Sutton left a sliding door open to allow Kopp to get into the house the night of the shootings, and went out with his girlfriend to eat and catch a movie.
Sutton has received three life sentences without the possibility of parole, even though according to his defense attorney, he plans to appeal.
CBS4's Gary Nelson and Natalia Zea contributed to this report.© MMX, CBS Broadcasting Inc.