Similar Articles
NEW FOR THURSDAY: OC’s New Beach Bash Weekend Features 10-Hour Concert Event, Bikini Parade
OCEAN CITY – North Ocean City businesses had their requests answ...READ MORENEW FOR WEDNESDAY: OC's Independent Election No More?
OCEAN CITY -- In a surprise turn of events, an unlikely majority of th...READ MORENEW FOR TUESDAY: Open Container Violation Now A Criminal Matter In OC
OCEAN CITY -- Ocean City officials last night approved an emergency or...READ MORENEW FOR TUESDAY: OC Police Warn Of Counterfeit Dollars
OCEAN CITY -- The Ocean City Police Department (OCPD) today is warning...READ MORENEW FOR MONDAY: Teen Seriously Injured Crossing Coastal Highway
OCEAN CITY -- Yet another pedestrian was struck by a vehicle and serio...READ MORENEW FOR MONDAY: Rare Blue Lobster Caught Off OC Coast By Commercial Fishermen
OCEAN CITY -- A commercial fishing vessel out of the commercial harbor...READ MOREWorcester Schools Satisfied With Finalized Budget
NEWARK -- The Worcester County Board of Education formally adopted las...READ MOREState Study Supports Expansion To Table Games
OCEAN CITY -- One day after an independent report revealed Maryland co...READ MOREWest OC Eyes Safety Upgrades
BERLIN -- The West Ocean City Association (WOCA) is looking to partner...READ MOREAutopsy Confirms Accidental Cause Of Death
OCEAN CITY -- Official autopsy results released this week revealed the...READ MOREJudge Denies Move To Disqualify State's Attorney
SNOW HILL - A Worcester
County Circuit Court judge last week denied a motion filed by defense attorneys
for the suspect in a West Ocean City
murder in April seeking to disqualify the entire Worcester County
State's Attorney's
Office.
A pre-trial hearing was
held last Wednesday to consider several motions in the case against accused
murderer Roberto Antonio Murillo, who remains behind bars after being charged
with the stabbing death of Cecilia Dea Parker, 56, in her West Ocean City residence on April 20. Murillo's
defense attorneys in August filed a motion to disqualify the state's attorney'soffice from prosecuting the case citing a conflict of interest caused when Assistant State's Attorney Pam Correa acted as an
interpreter for Murillo in the hours after the crime was discovered.According to the motion
to disqualify the state's attorney's office filed by defense attorneys E. Scott
Collins and Marc A. Zeve in August, the conflict arose when Correa acted as an
interpreter to assist investigators in the interview of Murillo, a Honduran
national who was identified as a suspect early on in the case.
'There is no question that information gleaned
from the assistant state's attorney was shared with the entire State's
Attorney's Office,' the motion reads.
However, Circuit Court
Judge Theodore Eschenberg found there were no irregularities associated with
Correa participating in the interview as an interpreter because Murillo had not
yet been identified as a suspect, nor had he been charged with any crime at the
time of the interview.
Eschenberg did rule
favorably on other defense motions. After the early interview before he was
identified as a suspect, Murillo essentially confessed to the crime after being
taken into custody. However, it came to light last week there are significant
problems with the accuracy of the transcripts of that interview including
sections of the audio transcripts that did not match up with the written
transcripts or sections of the audio transcripts that appear to be missing
altogether.
Because of the
irregularities in the two transcripts, Eschenberg set the prosecution team back
to the drawing board to correct the problems and come forward with an accurate
set of audio and written transcripts. For that reason, the judge continued the
defense's motion to suppress the alleged confession and moved the hearing date
on the motion back to Oct. 1 or the day the trial was set to begin.












There are no comments.