Rachelle Waterman
This
is one of those cases in which I am unsure after researching how I
feel about it. We have all been a teenager and obviously some of us
have been teenage girls. We said stupid things; we did stupid
things. We have all, teenager or not, said things that we did not
mean. I would even gander to say that at least some of us have
fantasized or even stated out loud we would like to see someone we do
not like dead. We may have even “planned” it all without
intention of ever following through. But, what happens when you
share these feelings with the wrong people and they put your words
into actions? That was the question for two juries to answer in
Alaska.
On
November 13, 2004 forty-eight year old Lauri Waterman was taken from
her home in Craig Alaska by the boyfriend, and ex-boyfriend, of her sixteen year old
daughter, Rachelle. She was tied up, force fed alcohol, beaten and
suffocated. She was then placed in the back of her van and taken to
a location far from her home. The two perpetrators had planned to
make it look like a drunk driving accident but they realized there
was evidence from the beating and suffocation that would not mesh
with an auto accident. So instead they decided to set the van on
fire. Her body would be found early the next afternoon.
By
November 20th authorities had arrested two twenty-four
year old men, Jason Arrant and Brian Radel as well as Lauri's
daughter Rachelle. They were all charged with first degree murder
and conspiracy to commit murder. Prosecutors would allege that while
Arrant and Radel were friends, they had both been intimately involved
with Rachelle. Neither of Rachelle's parents were thrilled or liked
the fact that Rachelle was involved with older men and it does not
seem that they, especially Lauri were scared to voice their opinion.
Rachelle would allege to the men that her mother was abusive to her.
Most indicate that the abuse Rachelle alleged was exaggerated or
twisted in a way to make Lauri look bad as opposed to a mother
attempting to control her out of control daughter.
It
appears that both Arrant and Radel quickly confessed to their role in
the murder and alleged Rachelle was the instigator. Both men would
take a plea deal. Radel, who apparently admitted to being the main
perpetrator received a sentence of “up to 99” years, while
Arrant, who everyone seemed to later allege as the actual perpetrator
received a sentence that had a “cap” of 50 years. The deal
included that both men had to testify against Rachelle who was
alleging she was not guilty of the crime. It was proven that she was
not directly involved in the crime as she was out of town at a
volleyball tournament for her school but that did not mean she had
not planned it, egged it on, or knew it was going to happen. In
fact, prosecutors allege that she did know it was going to happen on
that night and encouraged that it did since she would be gone out of
town. As far as intelligence the prosecutors would claim that
despite being eight years older than her, Rachelle was much smarter
than either of the two men, who had shady and difficult backgrounds.
Rachelle
first went to trial in 2006. She admitted discussing the idea with
Arrant but not directly with Radel and she did admit knowing that
there was a plan but she alleged that she did not think they would
follow through with things. Her trial ended in a hung jury and later
an Alaskan Appeals Court through out some of the evidence and the
indictment. The state appealed that verdict and some of the evidence
was restored and she was retried in 2011. By this time she had moved
to Florida and was working and attending college.
At
the second trial it seems that Arrant had refused to testify against
her and despite his agreement it seems there was little prosecutors
could do. Radel testified again but it seems he may have helped
Rachelle's defense rather than hurt it. According to Radel, Rachelle
was correct in the fact that he had never directly discussed the
murder plan with her and that while he had heard of the abuse
allegations from her, the murder plan came to him through Arrant. He
stated Arrant had told him that this was what Rachelle wanted done
and considering what he thought he did know about the abuse
allegations he believed Arrant. He would later claim that after the
murder he questioned whether Rachelle had in fact agreed to the plan
because Arrant was telling him of plans to kill others, including
Rachelle's father, and he did not believe Arrant when he again said
Rachelle wanted this done.
The
defense not only argued that Arrant was the driving force behind the
murder and that Rachelle was not involved, they also argued that
because of her age, sixteen at the time, that Rachelle's crime fell
under juvenile laws. The state argued that by charging her with
first degree murder as well as the conspiracy to commit murder charge
it was automatically elevated to an adult crime and to be held in
adult courts. Had those charges not been filed the state would have
not been able to do anything once Rachelle was twenty years old.
However, the fact that she was twenty-two in 2011 and those charges
applied they moved forward with the re-trial.
In
the end the second jury acquitted Rachelle on charges of first degree
murder and conspiracy to commit murder but they did find her guilty
on a lesser charge of criminally negligent homicide. At her
sentencing in July of 2011 her father was asking that she received a
sentence of time served considering that she had served over a year
in jail when she had been awaiting her first trial. The state asked
that the judge imposed a five year sentence. Instead the judge
decided to give her three years which meant she served a few more
months and was then released. The prosecutor did not seem too overly
upset at the verdict or the sentence and it seems that the
prosecution of Rachelle was meant more to send a message to other
teenagers. The prosecutor stated the verdict indicated that while
she may not have truly wanted her mother dead, and maybe her rantings
were simply those of a defiant teenager, Rachelle should have
reasonable known that Arrant and Radel “posed a substantial risk to
her mother.”
So
often we see cases in which a teenage girl, along with their
boyfriend plot the murder of one, or sometimes both, of her parents
but in most of those cases the girl participates in the murder so
there is no question as to their role. This case was a bit different
in the fact that Rachelle did not participate so it leaves the
question of whether she truly intended for her mother to die. She
very well may have wanted just that but she could have just as easily
been ranting about the “unfair” treatment she was receiving from
a mother who did not agree with the choices she was making and was
still, at least in a legal sense, able to stop her and responsible
for her. Only Rachelle will ever know the truth and have to live
with her actions.
That seems like a lenient sentence to me. I'm not buying her story. I understand about her age, but still ....
ReplyDeleteI AGREE!!! She went to school after and said she probably got drunk and ran off road. How would she just randomly know that if she didn't ha e first hand knowledge
DeleteI hope you have a daughter and she does to you what you did to your mom because you're so deserving of it
ReplyDeleteMurder!!!
ReplyDelete