An ex-marine has been found guilty
of dismembering a stripper he invited to a 'private party' at the
apartment he shared with his girlfriend.
Sex offender Terry Speaks, 42, was
convicted of second-degree murder following the death of Jaren Lockhart,
22, whose body parts washed ashore on the Mississippi Gulf Coast in
June 2012.
He told the court from the witness
stand on Friday, June 19th 2015 that he and co-defendant Margaret
Sanchez, his ex-girlfriend, last saw the victim after arranging for her
to go to a party with a stranger named Nick, and dance for $500.
But the jury disagreed, instead
siding with prosecutors who said he stabbed the mother-of-one in the
heart at his New Orleans apartment, cut her body into pieces and then
dumped them into the Mississippi Sound.
Jaren Lockhart, 22 |
He now faces life in prison when he is sentenced while Sanchez will face trial at a later date.
Speaks, who was convicted in North
Carolina of having sex with a minor in 2003, testified earlier on Friday
that he felt guilty about sending Lockhart to her death, in a bid to
get sympathy from the jury.
He said he did not tell
investigators about Nick, or about another man he supposedly let borrow
his car for $50 on the night of the killing, because he was concerned
that he would be looked at as 'contributing' to Lockhart's killing.
'My thought is we talked this girl
into doing this party,' Speaks testified. 'I felt guilty about talking
her into going to this party that she did not return from.'
Speaks was at times defensive, but mostly came across as subdued and he even choked up at one moment.
The trial is taking place in
Jefferson Parish, a suburban area adjacent to New Orleans. Prosecutors
charge that the murder took place at a home Speaks and Sanchez were
living in near the city's airport.
Speaks was also found guilty with obstruction of justice in the case.
He initially tried to represent himself in the trial but after one day handed the case back to his defense attorneys.
Jefferson Parish Assistant District
Attorney Doug Freese painted a portrait of Speaks as a serial liar who
came up with stories to avoid conviction.
Freese said Speaks made false statements to investigators when he was arrested six days after the slaying.
He acknowledged using an alias while
living in New Orleans because he was wanted for a probation violation
and he admitted misleading investigators because he didn't want to go
back to prison.
When authorities arrested him on
June 12, he tried to flee because he had warrants for his arrest, he
said, not because he had killed Lockhart.
Freese challenged Speaks on why he
didn't tell investigators about Nick and the other man he supposedly let
use his car on the night of the killing. Speaks said investigators
didn't give him a chance to tell his side of the story and were
determined that he was guilty.
The prosecution also relied on
emails Speaks sent to Lockhart while he was in prison and testimony from
an inmate who said Speaks told him he had done the killing.
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