
Most Viewed Stories
Most Commented Stories
Most Recommended Stories
Save & Share this Article
Jurors nearing final verdict in Cunningham trial
Comments 0 | Recommend 0Defense attorneys in the Matthew Cunningham murder trial had hoped to elicit some sympathy for their client this week, bringing in witness after witness to talk about the 30-year-old and why he should be sentenced to life in prison instead of death by lethal injection.
But by Wednesday, most of what the jury learned was that the man found guilty of killing Robert Barker and Katharine Spain in the Andante apartment complex in 2004 started doing drugs in high school, where he also ran a small gambling operation that one friend, Kurt Binder, said made $200 a week.
The jury also learned that Cunningham rebelled against his strict father, got at least one DUI while in high school, several more in college and even more after dropping out of college.
They also heard about his cocaine use increasing year after year, starting in high school and, according to Derek Voss, while attending a dry Jesuit College was found with a keg in his dorm room.
But Voss, and the others, all agreed that while alcohol and substance abuse was a major issue for Cunningham, none said they ever thought that he had a mental illness, which is the cornerstone of the defense’s attempt to keep Cunningham from being executed for the two murders.
“He is schizophrenic and I believe suffers from the disease of substance abuse,” Dr. Pablo Stewart, a psychologist, testified on Tuesday.
But Lisa Vanhaverbeck, a cousin and nurse who works in the mental health field, admitted that she thought it was drugs, not mental illness, that affected Cunningham.
Two weeks ago, after a long trial, the jury found Cunningham guilty of the murders of Barker and Spain, of two aggravated assaults and a burglary. Last week the same jury found that the crime met the legal requirements to justify the death penalty.
This week the jury heard from the family of the victims and from friends and family of Cunningham.
By Feb. 20, if all goes as planned, it will be up to the jury of six men and six women to decide Cunningham’s fate.
The jury has already been told by Judge Sally Duncan that the decision of life or death is an individual juror decision that doesn’t come with a formula.
Unlike the original question of his guilty or innocence, the jury doesn’t have to limit itself to testimony and evidence and decide as a group beyond a reasonable doubt.
In this phase of the trial the decision for the jury is if the mitigation presented, including some testimony that Cunningham was a good student and hadn’t been in trouble before the night he killed Barker and Spain, is compelling enough to warrant life in prison; or if the aggravaters that the jury agreed on last week, including how the murders were cruel, heinous and depraved, are enough to warrant death.
“The only logical, fair, merciful, just decision, is that Matt Cunningham should live,” his attorney, Larry Blieden, told the jury on Monday.
But Deputy County Attorney Mark Barry came right back and told the jury: “It was the defendant’s decisions that placed us here. He made decisions on which way his life would go.
“Do what you told us you could do, return a verdict of death.”
The trial continues Tuesday, with closing arguments set for Wednesday morning in Maricopa County Superior Court in downtown Phoenix.
More Cunningham trial coverage:
Feb. 11 - Cunningham jury hears statements from victims' families
Feb. 6 - Cunningham Jury to deliberate sentencing Thursday
Jan. 31 - Cunningham guilty in apartment murders
Jan. 29 - Cunningham's future in jury's hands
Jan. 25 - Defense's closing arguments set for Monday
Jan. 11 - Cunningham’s illness not 'remarkably consistent’
Jan. 8 - Expert says Cunningham schizophrenic
Jan. 4 - Cunningham competent says judge
Dec. 21, 2007 - Defense finds challenge in proving Cunningham insane
Dec. 19, 2007 - Defense starts in Cunningham trial
Dec. 4, 2007 - Emotions high for victims’ families in Cunningham trial
Nov. 27, 2007 - Cunningham murder trial commences
Oct. 30, 2007 - Jury selection begins in Cunningham murder trial
April 3, 2007 - Mental status could delay murder trial
See archived 'Local News' Stories »
We want our site to be a place where people discuss and debate ideas that foster stronger communities. We built this for you. Please take care of it. Tolerate broad thinking, but take action against obscene or hateful material. Make it a credible and safe place worth preserving and sharing.







