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- CRIME OF THE HEART ONLY - Jury acquits couple who held teen
- drug seller at gunpoint
-
- by Jack Broom, Seattle Times staff reporter
-
- Saturday, March 28, 1992 -- Page One, banner article.
- Reprinted from the Seattle Times without permission.
-
- -----------------
-
- An Auburn couple who held a teenage boy at gunpoint because he sold
- drugs to their daughter was acquitted of assault charges yesterday
- by jurors who said they didn't approve of the couple's action, but
- didn't consider it criminal.
-
- "I think we pretty much agreed their judgment was faulty, but they
- sort of acted out of haste," said one juror after the three-day trial
- of Theodore and Sherry Butz in King County Superior Court.
-
- The two were charged with second-degree assault in connection with
- the Nov. 11 incident.
-
- According to prosecutors, the two were armed with a shotgun and a handgun
- when they pulled alongside a group of young people that included a 15-year
- old boy who, they had been told, sold marijuana to their daughter, 15.
-
- Prosecutors said Theodore Butz pointed a shotgun at the boy's crotch and
- threatened to kill him and that Sherry Butz pointed the handgun at a
- teenage girl.
-
- The couple forced the boy into their car and drove him around for about
- 15 minutes, continually threatening to kill him, and eventually dropped
- him off where they had picked him up, prosecutors said.
-
- Deputy Prosecutor Cheryl Carey said the parents' anger was no excuse for
- their threats to use deadly force.
-
- "They took the law into their own hands---and they broke it," Carey said.
-
- But the couple's attorney, Charles Burgeson, told the jury, "This case
- is about a citizens' arrest. This case is about a mother and a father
- who give a damn."
-
- Burgeson said the couple drove the youth to the Auburn police station,
- unaware it is closed at night, before returning him where they picked
- him up.
-
- In his closing argument, Burgeson noted the boy admitted on the witness
- stand that he did sell marijuana to the Butzes' daughter, but was granted
- immunity from prosecution in exchange for testifying against the Butzes.
-
- "Ladies and gentlemen, this is a war," Burgeson said, adding that putting
- caring parents in jail while someone who sold drugs goes free would send
- the message: "Drug sellers, have at it . . . We as parents rwally don't
- have anything to say."
-
- He said the couple have fought their daughter's drug and alcohol problems
- for two years and have made calls to the police with no result. The daughter
- was not in court.
-
- Jurors deliberated about threee hours Thursday afternoon and yesterday
- morning before acquitting the parents.
-
- As the verdict was read, the Butzes wept and embraced. Sherry Butz
- approached the jury box to thank jurors as they filed out.
-
- "I knew that if justice prevailed, we'd be found innocent," said Sherry
- Butz, an elementary-school teacher who feared loss of her job if convicted.
- Theodore Butz is a contractor.
-
- Several jurors said it had been a difficult matter but that after
- deliberations, all 12---eight women and four men---favored acquittal.
-
- "The sentiment was that it was just a sad situation," said juror Gloria
- Hensley, "and they were reacting emotionally but were sort of pushed to
- that extent."
-
- In the hallway afterward, one juror told Theodore Butz the case was
- emotionally trying, adding, "We didn't sleep last night."
-
- "We haven't slept in three or four months," Butz replied.
-
- [END]
- ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
- and i wonder how soundly the rest of us will sleep knowing that the War on
- (Some) Drugs provides justification for vigilante justice like this. this
- is further evidence that we as a society really have our priorities screwed
- up big time.
-
- --
- /''' The Machman machman@milton.u.washington.edu david c carroll
- c-OO
- \ "i am the walrus. goo-goo-goo-joob"
- -
-
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