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Jurors Consider First Connecticut Federal Death Penalty Case

BRIDGEPORT, Connecticut-- The first federal death penalty case in Connecticut is headed to the jury.

Luke Jones, 34, is accused of murdering Monteneal Lawrence on Nov. 27, 1998, and Anthony Scott on June 26, 1999.

For the past two weeks, jurors heard prosecution witnesses describe Jones as an enforcer in a family-run organization that dealt drugs and death in the P.T. Barnum housing project.

He is charged with running a racketeering enterprise; trafficking in heroin, cocaine and crack; and murdering two people to enhance his reputation for violence.

"What's shocking is that for a number of years this defendant could terrorize the law-abiding members of the P.T. Barnum housing project," Assistant U.S. Attorney James J. Finnerty told the jury during closing arguments Tuesday. "What's shocking is he could walk through P.T. Barnum with the wrath of death. He's the grim reaper."

If the jury convicts Jones of committing two murders to further that enterprise, he could be put to death.

Connecticut defense attorneys contend Jones is the victim of prosecutors stretching federal murder laws "way beyond what Congress intended" and cooperating witnesses telling the government what it wants to hear.

A 12-member Connecticut jury was to begin deliberations Wednesday afternoon.

On Tuesday, Senior U.S. District Judge Alan H. Nevas questioned why the Lawrence murder was part of the federal case. The jury heard witnesses testify that Jones murdered an intoxicated Lawrence after the victim made "disrespectful" comments to the defendant's girlfriend during a house party.

"There's no question the provocation was the social 'dissing' of the defendant's girlfriend," Nevas said, while the jury was out of the courtroom. "There's no doubt in the court's mind that this defendant killed the victim in a cold-blood fashion."

But Nevas added, "It seems a classic Connecticut court murder case. What is the federal government doing prosecuting a Connecticut court murder?"

Robert Casale, one of Jones' lawyers, agreed. "We have no problem with the court providing a transcript to the state prosecutor with a strong recommendation," he said.

But Assistant U.S. Attorney Alex Hernandez argued that Jones committed the murder to preserve his reputation for violence. He pointed to the way the murder was committed in front of a house full of people and after Lawrence refused to step outside.

"When he is disrespected by a drunken outsider in the presence of two of his henchmen, he knows his reputation is on the line," Hernandez said.

Nevas decided to let the jury decide if that murder was a racketeering act.

Jones took issue with the way his lawyers handled his defense. He again asked the judge to declare a mistrial, but was refused.
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