By Seamus McGraw Page 1 of 4
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Pamela Vitale, victim |
Contra Costa County, CA (Crime Library) — It was, perhaps, the most single most chilling act in a singularly brutal slaying. As Pamela Vitale, the wife of well-well known legal pundit Daniel Horowitz lay dead or dying on the floor of their mobile home, her accused killer reportedly carved a Goth symbol on her body. Then, before leaving the crime scene, he drank a glass of water, washed his hands and showered.
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Daniel Horowitz |
But as cold-blooded as they might seem, the killer's final actions before fleeing the scene may, in the end, provide his best defense, say attorneys interviewed Thursday by Crimelibrary. In a word, that defense is likely to be insanity.
"I'd say that's the only bet on the table," said Gerald Boyle, the noted Wisconsin defense attorney whose high-profile clients have included serial killer and cannibal Jeffrey Dahmer and Eagle Scout thrill-killer Gary Hirte.
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Wisconsin defense attorney Gerald Boyle |
Boyle made his comments just hours after the Contra Costa County Sheriff's Department announced that it had arrested a 16-year-old Lafayette youth on charges of murder in the death of Vitale, whose partially clothed body clad in panties and a T-shirt — was discovered by her husband Saturday night in the double-wide trailer the couple shared while building an elaborate Italianate mansion on their remote 12-acre estate. Jimmy Lee, a spokesman for the sheriff's department, declined to name the suspect, but the San Francisco Chronicle identified him as Scott Dyleski. The teen was arrested late Wednesday, reportedly at a relative's home. He remains in custody at the county's juvenile detention center.
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Scott Dyleski in 2005 |
Relatives of Dyleski could not be reached Thursday for comment, and officials at Acalanes High School, which Dyleski attended, declined to comment.
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Seamus McGraw can be reached at seamusm@ptd.net
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