Defense attorneys for 'Junior' killers file strategic legal motions in hopes of cutting their prison time
09/05/2019 8:21 am PDT
By Mary Murphy, WPIX
The BRONX (WPIX) -- Twenty-five years to life is better than 40 years to life.
That's part of the legal thinking behind a recent move by the attorney for convicted "Junior" killer Jonaiki Martinez Estrella.
Defense lawyer Kyle Watters filed a motion this past Friday, just as the long Labor Day weekend was starting, asking Judge Robert Neary to set aside Martinez Estrella's conviction for conspiracy in the second degree.
Martinez Estrella and four other members of the Trinitarios gang were convicted June 14 of murder in the first degree, murder in the second degree, manslaughter, conspiracy and gang assault in the fatal 2018 stabbing of Lesandro "Junior" Guzman-Feliz—every count that prosecutors threw at them.
The killers all face the possibility of life without parole, although their lawyers are hoping they will get the lesser sentence of 25 years to life, opening up the chance for them to leave prison one day.
The reason behind the motion to dismiss the conspiracy conviction: The judge could conceivably decide to sentence the killers to 15 years for conspiracy, which could be served after the murder sentence. That could add up to 40 years to life.
Watters argued during the trial that conspiracy to kill Junior or anyone else wasn't proven, but the judge denied a motion to dismiss the count.
Now he wants his arguments on the record again.
"I believe they didn't prove the elements of this part of the crime," Watters told PIX11 by phone Thursday morning.
Watters acknowledges in the court papers that his client, Martinez Estrella, inflicted Junior's fatal neck wound that "perforated his jugular vein."
But he also notes in the documents, "Their mission was an assault, not to kill...there was no mutually shared intent," that would factor into a conspiracy conviction.