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Crime

Tech CEO Arrested In 1992 Mountain View Cold Case Slaying After DNA Breakthrough (thedailybeast.com) 70

An anonymous reader quotes a report from The Daily Beast: On Sept. 5, 1992, computer engineer Laurie Houts, 25, was found fatally strangled in her car near a California garbage dump. Her boyfriend's roommate was arrested in connection with the case, but two trials -- and two hung juries -- later, a judge dismissed the case. The roommate moved to the Netherlands soon afterward. Over the weekend, the roommate -- now the chief executive of a small software company -- was arrested as he landed at John F. Kennedy International Airport in New York City, according to the Santa Clara County Office of the District Attorney. John Woodward, the 58-year-old CEO and president of ReadyTech, is expected to be extradited to Santa Clara County by the end of the month, District Attorney Jeff Rosen said Monday. Once there, Woodward will be arraigned for the third time in Houts' murder by strangulation.

Houts' body was discovered by a passerby less than a mile from her office at Adobe Systems in Mountain View more than 30 years ago, according to the San Francisco Chronicle. A rope was around her neck, and there were footprints on the inside of her windshield, which were called "a sign of her struggle with Woodward" by the district attorney's office. Forensic science at the time was able to match Woodward to fingerprints found outside the car, but investigators could not prove that he had been inside the vehicle. Still, when Houts' boyfriend made a call, monitored by police, to Woodward soon after the 25-year-old's death, he "did not deny" killing Houts. Instead, according to a police summary of the matter, Woodward asked what evidence the authorities had against him and suggested to the roommate that they "meet in a parking lot" to talk more.

Woodward, who had no alibi for the night Houts was killed, was arrested that same year. Prosecutors alleged that Woodward had developed an "unrequited" romantic interest in Houts' boyfriend. The theory was criticized as homophobic at Woodward's first trial by his defense lawyer in 1995, the The Mercury News reported Monday, and the jury deadlocked on his innocence, voting 8-4 for acquittal. A year later, despite a judge barring the romantic-rival argument, the jury hearing Woodward's second trial again hung itself, this time ruling 7-5. The judge soon dismissed the case for insufficient evidence. But advances in DNA technology allowed detectives to link Woodward to the rope around Houts' neck for the first time last year, Rosen's statement said. Investigators in both the Santa Clara County Crime Lab and Mountain View Police Department matched both Woodward's genetic material and fibers on his sweatpants to "the murder weapon," police said.

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Tech CEO Arrested In 1992 Mountain View Cold Case Slaying After DNA Breakthrough

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  • by mi ( 197448 ) <slashdot-2017q4@virtual-estates.net> on Tuesday July 12, 2022 @04:32PM (#62697926) Homepage Journal

    Prosecutors alleged that Woodward had developed an "unrequited" romantic interest in Houts' boyfriend. The theory was criticized as homophobic

    How is this theory — whether it was true or not — "homophobic"? On the contrary, it was confirming the homosexuals' ability to feel strong romantic passions...

    • Re: (Score:3, Informative)

      by backslashdot ( 95548 )

      I agree that the theory is not homophobic. But I think some people would see it like it was assuming that because he is gay he would be interested in his roommate and commit murder because of that. It assumes, apparently correctly in this case, that a gay person would not control their urges or suicide rather than commit a heinous crime.

      Analogy. Let's assume smokers are known for liking cigars. If a smoker is accused of stealing a cigar, with the only evidence being that he had been window shopping at the c

      • by gosso920 ( 6330142 ) on Tuesday July 12, 2022 @05:01PM (#62697996)
        Sometimes a cigar is just a cigar.
      • by mi ( 197448 ) <slashdot-2017q4@virtual-estates.net> on Tuesday July 12, 2022 @05:06PM (#62698012) Homepage Journal

        The assumption is that smokers are easily willing to steal

        But we know, that (some) heterosexuals are prone to what's known as "crimes of passion". Did Shakespeare manifest heterophobia (and racism) by writing "Othello"? Of course, not...

        The defense lawyer did his job back then — but, that this particular line helped him, reflects badly on the society. And it only got worse since...

      • by quantaman ( 517394 ) on Tuesday July 12, 2022 @05:47PM (#62698126)

        I agree that the theory is not homophobic. But I think some people would see it like it was assuming that because he is gay he would be interested in his roommate and commit murder because of that. It assumes, apparently correctly in this case, that a gay person would not control their urges or suicide rather than commit a heinous crime.

        Analogy. Let's assume smokers are known for liking cigars. If a smoker is accused of stealing a cigar, with the only evidence being that he had been window shopping at the cigar store, you can assume that the accusers are being prejudicial because they believe he did it just because of the fact that he liked cigars. The assumption is that smokers are easily willing to steal, so you don't need other evidence or proof.

        More generally I'd say it was the implication that homosexuals were inherently deviant and uncontrollably lusting after straight men to the extent that one would be willing to murder his roommate's girlfriend.

        As it turns out he probably did kill her, though that doesn't mean they got the motive right. The article is light on the details but it does seem a somewhat odd motive for murder.

      • From the summary, it says the "homophobic" accusation was leveled by the defense attorney. Which should be sufficient explanation as to how it is "homophobic".

    • We're talking about 1992. The fact that sombody was homosexual might easily be implicitely have been used against someone. You know, "not normal", "not like us upright people" and "who knows what else he might be".
    • by hey! ( 33014 )

      A defense argument impugning a prosecutorial theory doesn't have to be reasonable. It just has to raise doubts *in a single juror's mind*.

    • by quenda ( 644621 )

      How is this theory — whether it was true or not — "homophobic"?

      It may have something to do with the fact that homosexuals have substantially higher "intimate partner" homicide rates, and the social taboo in some circles around saying anything that might be perceived as dispagaing to minorities. i.e. political correctness.
      You can say that men have higher homicide rates than women, but any talk of race or sexuality with crime is taboo.

      Of course the rate of such homicides are still very low, and no cause for any "phobia" or disparagement of t

    • Consider the timing of this; this was the early 90's. Only a few years before, AIDS was a disease only for gay men, and some saw that as punishment for sin. Suggesting that being gay was a motivation to commit murder wouldn't be atypical at the time, and suggesting it was homophobic likely came out from the beginnings of advocacy for gay rights.
    • It's not homophobic, because homophobia is a fear of homosexuals. But is it anti-gay? Well the theory would be that bringing out that the defendant was gay might be intended to evoke anti-gay sentiments in the jury, which at the time was probably a reasonable expectation, especially considering AIDS was raging at the time.

  • by Anonymous Coward on Tuesday July 12, 2022 @04:35PM (#62697936)

    "the jury hearing Woodward's second trial again hung itself" .. oh my god, how bad was the case?

  • I hope the defense has the money to have the other dna on the rope tested.

    • > I hope the defense has the money to have the other dna on the rope tested.

      I guess there's a small chance it was her rope and they were roommates. Or that he often got a ride from here so of course his DNA was in the car.

      The article is probably wrong on the details, as per usual.

  • by gurps_npc ( 621217 ) on Tuesday July 12, 2022 @07:33PM (#62698342) Homepage

    They mentioned "Did not deny" committing the crime. Guess what, I am willing to bet that the majority of people here have not denied committing the crime.

    That is the worst example of cop logic I have heard. He must be be guilty because he didn't deny it? No wonder the jury hung twice, the authorities here seem to to be idiots.

    I hope this new DNA evidence is better than the rest of the evidence.

    • They mentioned "Did not deny" committing the crime. Guess what, I am willing to bet that the majority of people here have not denied committing the crime.

      That is the worst example of cop logic I have heard. He must be be guilty because he didn't deny it? No wonder the jury hung twice, the authorities here seem to to be idiots.

      I hope this new DNA evidence is better than the rest of the evidence.

      That's actually not as bad logic as it sounds.

      People who commit crimes tend to think their actions are justified or at least explainable, so they tend to stumble when asked to deny them outright. Jerry Sandusky is a classic example [businessinsider.com], during a televised interview, while trying to prove he wasn't a pedophile, instead of outright denying a sexual attraction to young boys he started out by trying to explain how his particular feelings were different than sexual attraction.

      I don't know if there's a clinical descr

      • by ebvwfbw ( 864834 )

        I think anyone would stumble on a TV interview.
        "Mr. Quantaman, prove you're not a pedophile." That's right up there with "Mr. ebvwfbw, prove you didn't kill all the people found in the Guiana camp with Jim Jones." A mass murder heard around the world. I can't prove I wasn't there nor that I didn't do it. Other than not having a passport, being a kid at the time. Proving it now? I don't think I could. Everyone in the audience looks at you - this guy is a monster. Maybe a rope that was part of my jacket when

        • I think anyone would stumble on a TV interview.

          Except he did stumble in a TV interview. And he's not [bodylanguagesuccess.com] the first [bodylanguagesuccess.com]

          "Mr. Quantaman, prove you're not a pedophile." That's right up there with "Mr. ebvwfbw, prove you didn't kill all the people found in the Guiana camp with Jim Jones." A mass murder heard around the world.

          Yeah, I severely doubt the friend asked a deliberately indirect question.

          It was probably more like, "Q: Did you kill her? A: Why are you asking me that?"

          Which superficially seems fine, but really, a normal person asked if they did something horrendous will instinctively reply with a strong denial. The problem with trying being a good liar in that instance is it's hard to put yourself in the shoes of a normal person, you don't instinctively repl

          • by ebvwfbw ( 864834 )

            I think anyone would stumble on a TV interview.

            Except he did stumble in a TV interview. And he's not [bodylanguagesuccess.com] the first [bodylanguagesuccess.com]

            Yes, the point I was making. Consider a famous one recently - "Ok, we now know Mr. Epstein was murdered. Prove you didn't do it." I'd be - Uh... well... It's hard to prove it unless you were in jail at the time. Alibis can be broken. Even with a date I'm not sure what I was doing when that happened. I may have been at a Federal facility. I understand that can't be used to prove I didn't do something. Even with cameras. That's what they tell me.

            "Mr. Quantaman, prove you're not a pedophile." That's right up there with "Mr. ebvwfbw, prove you didn't kill all the people found in the Guiana camp with Jim Jones." A mass murder heard around the world.

            Yeah, I severely doubt the friend asked a deliberately indirect question.

            It was probably more like, "Q: Did you kill her? A: Why are you asking me that?"

            Which superficially seems fine, but really, a normal person asked if they did something horrendous will instinctively reply with a strong denial. The problem with trying being a good liar in that instance is it's hard to put yourself in the shoes of a normal person, you don't instinctively reply with a strong denial because you don't find the prospect of that murder to be horrendous.

            Depends on how it was done. If he knew he was going to be asked

            • I think anyone would stumble on a TV interview.

              Except he did stumble in a TV interview. And he's not [bodylanguagesuccess.com] the first [bodylanguagesuccess.com]

              Yes, the point I was making. Consider a famous one recently - "Ok, we now know Mr. Epstein was murdered. Prove you didn't do it."

              Not a quote I could find and I'm not even sure the specific person being asked was supposed to be.

              I'd be - Uh... well... It's hard to prove it unless you were in jail at the time. Alibis can be broken. Even with a date I'm not sure what I was doing when that happened. I may have been at a Federal facility. I understand that can't be used to prove I didn't do something. Even with cameras. That's what they tell me.

              Again, this isn't asking someone to PROVE they didn't do X, it's asking someone IF they did do X.

              That's a really, really critical difference when you're considering the response.

              Asking someone to prove a negative is famously difficult, I'd expect them to stumble. Asking someone if they did something, that should be a very simple variation on yes or no. If they stumble it's a big red flag.

              Because I know of plenty of cases where they get rid of it long before 30 years. I have a cousin that was very brutally murdered in the 1970s and we know who did it. Today they could probably prove it. It turns out they threw all the stuff related to his murder away in the 1980s. FBI, Locals, etc. Nobody has any of it anymore. When I say brutal, I mean it took them weeks to finally get around to killing him. He was tortured during that time. It was a cross-country trek. The police really wanted to get them.

              I'm very sorry to hear

              • by ebvwfbw ( 864834 )

                Yes, the point I was making. Consider a famous one recently - "Ok, we now know Mr. Epstein was murdered. Prove you didn't do it."

                Not a quote I could find and I'm not even sure the specific person being asked was supposed to be.

                Consider whether the question was to me, or you. I didn't do it and I'm fairly sure you didn't do it. Proving that is tough.

                I'd be - Uh... well... It's hard to prove it unless you were in jail at the time. Alibis can be broken. Even with a date I'm not sure what I was doing when that happened. I may have been at a Federal facility. I understand that can't be used to prove I didn't do something. Even with cameras. That's what they tell me.

                Again, this isn't asking someone to PROVE they didn't do X, it's asking someone IF they did do X.

                That's a really, really critical difference when you're considering the response.

                Asking someone to prove a negative is famously difficult, I'd expect them to stumble. Asking someone if they did something, that should be a very simple variation on yes or no. If they stumble it's a big red flag.

                Sounds like you haven't been at the receiving end of such things. If you're being asked such a question, they are usually darn sure you did it. They're not asking about your health. While there is a difference in the end there is no difference. Answer very carefully because you can talk yourself into trouble. If they knew for sure they wouldn't be asking. I know guys that I bet could m

      • Yeah, that is exactly the HORRIBLE logic cops use. No.

        That is illogical, moronic bullcrap. If you deny it, they say that is proof you did it. If you do not deny it, they say that is proof you did it.

        You want to know what is evidence someone did it? Fingerprints, DNA, recordings, confessions, eye witness testimony and finally, 'knowledge that only the criminal had', that is not secretly given to them by a cop.

        Bullshit psychological mumbo jumbo is not evidence - and that comes from the son of a psychiatr

    • I notice that you did not deny it anywhere in your post.

      Murderer.
    • Even if he did deny it - well we all know that murderers never lie.

      I'm not sure I want to live in a world where not denying something is equated to admitting guilt. I guess I'll just have to start denying literally everything in order to avoid malicious prosecution now.

      For the record: I deny that I've ever killed anybody. Now I'm free from arraignment, right?

  • So the suspect flees the country after a second hung jury. Years later forgets that he was not acquitted. Forgets that there is no statute of limitations on murder. Or that he can be arrested in one state (NY) for crimes committed in another (CA). Is he guilty of murder? He's certainly guilty of stupidity.

  • by billmaya ( 5363267 ) on Wednesday July 13, 2022 @08:24AM (#62699302)
    I was wondering why, after two trials where each ended in a hung jury, the suspect was able to be tried for a third time for this crime. Doesn't double jeopardy apply? I did some research and am posting here in case anyone else had the same question. Here is what I found at https://whatisdoublejeopardy.c... [whatisdoublejeopardy.com] "To put it simply, an individual cannot be tried for the same crime twice. But, as in many legal situations, there are specific case attributes that qualify one for double jeopardy. For double jeopardy to apply, the individual must have gone through a trail and received a result. This means in a jury trial, the case must go to a verdict, and for a bench trail, the judge must give a ruling. If the case results in a hung jury or mistrial, double jeopardy will not apply going forward, until, as stated above, a final result is reached." So since there was no verdict, the suspect can be tried a third time.
    • The trials did not end with a judgement, therefore it ended in mistrial, and can be tried again. Often, prosecutors don't bother because if they couldn't make the case the first time, it's unlikely a different jury is going to come to a different result. But there's no legal bar to a do-over.

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