February Trial Set In 'Backpage Muder' Case
MOUNT CLEMENS (WWJ/AP) - A trial will start next year for a metro Detroit man accused of killing four women after meeting them through online escort ads in 2011.
A Macomb County Circuit Court judge on Thursday set a Feb. 4 start date for the trial of James C. Brown, who is charged with killing the women at his Sterling Heights home and then dumping their bodies in Detroit.
Brown's attorney, Jeff Cojocar, said his client maintains his innocence.
The bodies of 24-year-old Demesha Hunt and 23-year-old Renisha Landers were found Dec. 19, 2011 in separate car trunks in Detroit. Then, on Christmas Day 2011, the bodies of two additional women, 29-year-old Natasha Curtis and 28-year-old Vernithea McCrary, were found in the trunk of burning car.
Brown told police that he met the women on Backpage.com, which carries personal ads. Police said three of the women had ties to ads for escort services on the website.
Detroit detective Derryck Thomas testified that Brown admitted he was with the women in his basement when they died. Thomas said Brown told him that he fell asleep and found the women lifeless when he woke up.
Dr. Francisco Diaz, an assistant Wayne County medical examiner, testified that the victims died of asphyxiation, a lack of oxygen to the brain. Diaz said it's possible for someone to be asphyxiated without a struggle, especially if the attacker is larger than the victim. Brown is a large, muscular man who could have killed the women as he sat on them, Diaz said.
Detectives say Brown also admitted to burning two of the women's bodies after putting them in a car and driving to the east side. Another investigator testified that Brown's DNA was found under the victims' fingernails and blood was found in Brown's house that matches the victims.
Brown is charged in Macomb County, where the deaths are alleged to have occurred, with four counts of first degree murder, four counts of disinterment and mutilation of a dead body, one count of arson of real property, and one count of arson of personal property. He faces life in prison if convicted as charged.
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