Judge rules suspected Golden State Killer must be photographed naked

A judge ruled Thursday that prosecutors in the Golden State Killer case can collect DNA, fingerprints and take photographs of the suspect’s entire body.

Attorneys for former California police officer Joseph DeAngelo, 72, had asked the court to halt the search, arguing the warrant it relied on should no longer be valid because it was granted before his arrest.

But Superior Court Judge Michael Sweet sided with the district attorney and said that courts have repeatedly allowed the collection of such evidence because it’s not a form of testimony and would not harm DeAngelo’s right against self-incrimination.

 

Say ‘cheese’: A judge ruled Thursday that prosecutors in the Golden State Killer case can collect DNA, fingerprints and take photographs of Joseph DeAngelo’s naked body

Diane Howard, the public defender for DeAngelo, is surrounded by reporters after a court appearance in Sacramento County Superior Court on Thursday

Diane Howard, the public defender for DeAngelo, is surrounded by reporters after a court appearance in Sacramento County Superior Court on Thursday

‘There’s no basis to stop the execution of the search warrant,’ he said.

DeAngelo, appearing in court in an orange jumpsuit and handcuffed to a wheelchair, said nothing. He has not entered a plea.

Caught: DeAngelo was arrested last week and identified by prosecutors as the man responsible for at least a dozen murders and more than 50 rapes across California

Caught: DeAngelo was arrested last week and identified by prosecutors as the man responsible for at least a dozen murders and more than 50 rapes across California

Sacramento Sheriff John McGinness said the request for the photographs may be related to clues issued by law enforcement dating back to the 70s and 80s when authorities were searching for an East Area Rapist suspect.

At the time they publicized the notion that he was not well endowed, McGinness said. 

DeAngelo was arrested last week and identified by prosecutors as the man responsible for at least a dozen murders and more than 50 rapes across California between 1976 and 1986.

Prosecutors said they used DNA and a genealogical website to identify DeAngelo, decades after the case had gone cold.

It was unclear when prosecutors will collect the new evidence. They had planned to do so on Wednesday but the defense attempt to prevent them halted that.

Diane Howard, DeAngelo’s public defender, declined comment as she left court. Deputy Sacramento County District Attorney Thienvu Ho declined to answer questions about why prosecutors needed the DNA, fingerprints and photographs of DeAngelo’s naked body, including his genitalia.

DeAngelo's defense had asked the court to halt the collection of photos and DNA 

DeAngelo’s defense had asked the court to halt the collection of photos and DNA 

The search and arrest warrants for DeAngelo that contain legal arguments and case details justifying why investigators want to gather the evidence are shielded from public view.

The Associated Press and other news organizations have filed a motion to unseal them, which could provide additional details about the DNA techniques prosecutors used to identify him. A hearing is scheduled for May 14.



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