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Sheriff: Sex offender says he killed teen

David Onstott, yes a former sex offender, admitted killing Sarah Lunde, but there is a significant fact that most folks do not realize, he was never charged with any sex crime as part of the murder, because there was nothing sexual about the murder. However, there is some proof that it may have been drug related.
4-18-2005 Florida:

RUSKIN - Less than three hours after a memorial for 13-year-old Sarah Michelle Lunde on Sunday, Hillsborough County Sheriff David Gee announced that registered sex offender David Lee Onstott had confessed to killing her.

On hearing the news, Rebekah Lunde, Sarah's 22-year-old sister, collapsed in the parking lot of the First Apostolic Church of Jesus Christ, where Sarah was a regular.

"You are talking about a person who would murder a child," the sheriff said, declining to give many details about Onstott's confession. "Who knows what's in his mind."

Onstott is charged with first degree murder. In a court appearance Monday, Onstott made no statement and was ordered to be held without bond. Prosecutor Mark Ober said no decision has been made on whether to seek the death penalty.

Gee sketched out the sequence of the killing.

Onstott, who months ago had dated Sarah's mother, Kelly May, went to the Lunde home on April 10, between midnight and 4 a.m. Sarah was inside alone.

He "knocked on the door and the victim yelled to him to open the door," Gee said. Inside, Onstott and Sarah began arguing, then Onstott "put the victim in a choke hold, causing her to become unconscious" and then die, Gee said.

Onstott then hid the body in an abandoned fish farm pond a half mile south of her home, authorities said.

"When he put her there, he went through great effort to keep the body from being discovered," the sheriff said Sunday.

Gee said that when Sarah's body was pulled from the pond Saturday, it was partly clothed.

An autopsy by the medical examiner will determine whether Sarah was sexually assaulted, Gee said.

Asked whether he thinks Onstott should receive the death penalty, he said: "That's going to be for the state attorney (to decide). I certainly hope so."

Before her disappearance, Sarah had spent the weekend in Apopka, at a youth rally with First Apostolic Church members.

She returned to Ruskin that Saturday, April 9, attended a birthday party and was home by 9 p.m. Her mother, not expecting Sarah to return until Sunday, was out of town.

Only Sarah's 17-year-old brother, Andrew Lunde, was at home. She asked him to get her something to eat that night, but instead, he left and hung out with friends until 4 a.m., he told detectives.

When he came home, the front door of their mobile home at 2512 30th St. SE was "wide open" and Sarah was gone.

He told WTSP-Ch. 10 that Onstott showed up about 5 a.m. and asked to see his mother. Onstott left when he learned she wasn't there, taking a beer bottle from the home, Andrew Lunde said.

Sarah's mother got home that Sunday. She and Sarah's brother assumed that the sixth-grader was staying with a friend Sunday night.

But on Monday, when May checked at Beth Shields Elementary School and found that no one had seen her daughter, she reported Sarah missing, and the weeklong search began. Hundreds of people joined the search. A search dog and handler found Sarah's body Saturday morning at the fish farm at 3530 30th St. SE.

Onstott's most recent girlfriend said Sunday that she did not think he committed the crime, despite the confession.

Ashley Poston of Ruskin said she and Onstott have been dating and living together for about three months and that it had been at least four months since Onstott visited the Lunde family's home.

"I just don't believe he did it at all," the 20-year-old day care worker said. "He's not like that."

It's more likely, Poston said, that Onstott was tired and gave in to pressure by law enforcement officials to confess.

The last time Poston saw Onstott was Monday morning, when she asked him to leave. Poston said she had found out that one of Onstott's ex-girlfriends had a restraining order against him and they argued. Onstott had earlier denied that, she said.

"I told him that I didn't want to be with a liar," Poston said in a telephone interview.

Even though the couple broke up a week ago, Poston had high hopes for their relationship.

Onstott, she said, made her feel good about herself and got along well with her two children, both toddlers. He watched her children several times without incident while she went to the grocery store, she said.

Poston, who met Onstott six months ago, thought they would get back together. "I was planning on marrying this man," Poston said. "He was good to my kids. He just treated me right. He was a good man."

He also was a man with a criminal record. Onstott, of 3510 Petrova Circle in Ruskin, was convicted in 1995 of sexual battery on a Hillsborough acquaintance. She testified that he knocked on her door, asked to use the bathroom, then threw her to the floor and raped her. A jury convicted him.

In a letter to the court asking a judge for leniency in his rape sentence, Onstott said the jurors didn't have all the information they needed to come to a verdict. He said they never got to hear about the plaintiff's drug history and that he never forced himself on her sexually. It was a case, Onstott said, of exchanging cocaine for sex.

"I would also like to state that I am a hard working person and have been so all my life," Onstott wrote to the judge. "I have set goals to better myself ... I know that if I were to have my sentence reduced, I could help the police in my town of Ruskin put away the cocaine dealers ... because I know their sources."

He served six years in prison and was ordered to serve probation.

Court records show that Onstott violated his probation in October 2002 when he hit a man across the face with a machete.

Onstott has been at the Hillsborough County's Orient Road Jail since Tuesday, on an unrelated charged of aggravated assault with a deadly weapon. Authorities say he threatened a man on Tuesday with a screwdriver during a "heated argument."

An official records check revealed that Onstott was wanted for driving under the influence in Michigan, where his mother and three children live. Deputies later added a fugitive charge and a charge of failing to register as a sexual offender.

He was held without bail even before the murder charge.

During Sunday morning church service, before Gee announced Onstott's confession, Patrick Beaver told the congregation to take comfort that Sarah was in a better place. "Whoever did this, one day, he will have to answer to God," Beaver said. "(Jesus) is a lamb in forgiveness and a lion in judgment."

About 70 family members and friends of the Lunde family, came to the church for the memorial that was to follow the regular church service. They chose not to attend the regular service, but planned to attend the memorial immediately following.

But when the service ended and the memorial began, no one notified them and they missed it.

When told of the mixup near the end of the memorial, the pastor, the Rev. Johnny Cook, said, "It's too late now. We'll fellowship with them when we're done."

Doris Fontana's 13-year-old daughter, Leslie, was best friends with Sarah. Fontana had planned a 50th birthday party for her husband, John, the afternoon that Sarah and other church youth returned from Apopka.

Leslie asked her mother to let Sarah spend the night, but Fontana said no. "I hold a little measure of guilt for that," she said.

Sarah had told Leslie she didn't like Onstott, Fontana said. But Fontana said she never found out why.

John Fontana held up a picture Sunday showing Sarah at his birthday party. "For all I know," he said, "I fixed her last meal." ..Source.. by KEVIN GRAHAM

The problem with probation

Apparently there was a KNOWN problem with probation during the era that multiple children were killed in Florida!
6-13-2004 Florida:

Hundreds of violent offenders in Florida are still on probation even after repeatedly breaking the rules. The solution? Officials don't really have one.

When people learned about Joseph P. Smith's past, their sorrow turned to outrage.

The man charged with killing 11-year-old Carlie Brucia in Sarasota had a long criminal history that included hitting a woman in the face with a motorcycle helmet. He was on probation when Carlie was killed in February and could have been jailed earlier for using drugs or not paying court fees.

Smith's case is not unique.

Hundreds of violent offenders in Florida are still on probation even after repeatedly breaking the rules, a St. Petersburg Times analysis shows.

A Tampa sex offender violated 10 rules of his probation after serving time in prison for fondling a 7-year-old. He was never sent back to prison and is a fugitive.

A Pasco County man repeatedly convicted of battery and burglary went years without having his probation revoked despite this assessment from his probation officer: "If the subject is released on any type of probationary sanctions, it would be a risk to the community."

A Tampa man who assaulted his sister, hit his boss in the head with a hammer and went to prison four times still received probation when arrested for several other offenses.

The Times analysis of probation and inmate data from the Department of Corrections found:

A total of 426 people with at least one violent offense in their past were accused of violating their probation five or more times between July 2001 and January 2004.

Most of those 426 people did not receive prison time for their violations, in spite of criminal histories that included beating up girlfriends, mistreating children or hitting the police officers who arrested them.

Some offenders won second and third chances on probation, even though in previous cases judges had revoked their probation for breaking the rules.

Florida Attorney General Charlie Crist said if someone has committed a serious violent felony and later violates probation, "then there's probably some common sense logic to the notion that you've earned the right to go back to jail."
But Pinellas-Pasco Public Defender Bob Dillinger said probation often helps people turn their lives around. Probation can even make sense for some drug abusers with violence in their past, he said, because, "If you don't treat that problem, even if you put them in jail, you can't put them in jail for life. When he gets out, he's probably going to be worse."

Pinellas-Pasco Chief Assistant State Attorney Bruce Bartlett said it is inevitable that some probation violators will commit horrific crimes later.

"We all live in fear that whatever we do on a particular case could lead someone to harm further down the road," he said.

Despite those fears, Bartlett said, the probation system generally works. Joe Brucia doesn't agree.

"It's obvious after looking at some of these cases that there's clearly something wrong," Carlie's father said, "and no one will admit it."


* * *

The American system of probation stems from the vision of a Massachusetts boot maker named John Augustus, who wanted to rehabilitate people.

Augustus, a teetotaler, bailed a drunk out of jail in the 1840s. He got the man sober, kept him out of trouble, and repeated the process with other petty criminals.

"It was designed as a way of giving people who were not considered to be rotten through-and-through a second chance," said Lawrence M. Friedman, a Stanford Law School professor and legal historian.

Pinellas-Pasco Circuit Judge Phil J. Federico keeps a yellow sticky note on the bench in his courtroom in the Largo-area Criminal Justice Center. He reminds himself that state law says judges can impose probation when "the defendant is not likely again to engage in a criminal course of conduct."

Federico prides himself on being a conservative judge who doesn't give a lot of second chances. When a criminal comes back to court because he violated probation, the judge often rubs the top of his bald head in frustration and reads aloud the sticky note.

"As few times as possible," he said, "do I want to have a victim stand in my courtroom saying, "Why's this guy out on the street again?' and I say, "I'm sorry, sir or ma'am, but I don't have an answer.' "

That's the kind of question Michael Feighan had when he learned the history of Nicholas Whytsell, a 21-year-old multiple probation violator who burglarized his Port Richey home in April 2002.

"I'm amazed, given his drug charges and violent offenses, to hear that he's still walking around," said Feighan, 40.

Whytsell had pleaded guilty to battery for a scuffle with a man at a party in May 2001 and received 12 months of probation in January 2002. But before he was even sentenced, he threw a ceramic bowl at his girlfriend so forcefully that doctors had to pull shards out of her face, hand and arm and put 40 stitches in her hand.

Whytsell later went on to violate his probation several times and was charged with selling drugs. Like a lot of people with long criminal records, he was sentenced to spend some time in jail.

But all of that did not stop him from getting another shot at probation. He was sentenced to two years of probation in July 2003 for the theft at the Feighans' home and to four years of probation in August on a felony battery conviction for throwing the bowl at his girlfriend. That was a third-degree felony, punishable by up to five years in prison. He later absconded and was arrested last month for three violations of probation and failure to appear. He is in the Pasco County Jail.


* * *

When offenders are placed on probation, they are given rules to follow. These often include getting drug treatment, keeping a job, staying in touch with probation officers, making restitution to victims, paying court costs and not breaking the law.

But people break the rules all the time. Of 199,215 people who were supposed to be on DOC probation in April, about one in five had disappeared. Among the rest, nearly one in four had an active violation report.

Hillsborough Circuit Judge Dan Perry doesn't have a lot of patience for people who break the law while on probation. He is likely to strongly consider jail for them and for those who disregard court-ordered terms such as applying for jobs or taking anger management classes.

Perry said it would be impossible for him to jail everyone who violates the technical rules of probation, such as failing to pay court costs. "If I did that with my case load alone," he said, "I guarantee you I would have an extra 500 to 1,000 people in the county jail in a month because of not paying costs."

Jacob Michael Petley of Pasco County has broken the rules of probation several times, sometimes by committing new violent offenses. He went years without getting a prison sentence.

Petley, who is 23 and has been diagnosed with mental health problems, including hearing hallucinations, was first arrested at age 12. His record as an adult includes trying to "karate kick" an elderly woman; burglarizing a house and punching the elderly homeowner; stealing from U-Haul storage units; criminal mischief; carrying a concealed weapon; instigating a bar fight; and many other crimes.

He has broken his probation nearly every way possible: failing drug tests, blowing off appointments with his probation officers, destroying a GPS monitoring device, getting arrested and re-arrested.

He spent some time in jail but had never been sent to prison. A judge once gave him a five-year prison sentence but suspended it. Three months later, he was arrested on a burglary charge. Earlier this year, he was briefly on the run before being arrested last month. And just this month, a judge sentenced him to nine years in prison.

For many critics of the justice system, a case like Petley's or Joseph Smith's suggests an obvious solution: Revoke the probation of those who violate the rules.

But Florida doesn't have enough prison cells to lock up everyone who breaks the rules. The prison system in April held 80,548 inmates - more than enough to fill Raymond James Stadium. But more than twice that many people were on state probation. Several legal experts said people with violent histories and past probation violations should get the fewest extra chances.

But Department of Corrections Secretary James Crosby said focusing on the worst violators is difficult. After Joseph Smith's arrest in February, he said, the staff's research indicated "there's at least six or seven thousand people that had a record similar to his."

Crosby said there is no concrete research showing those types of people on probation will commit more violent offenses. There is no way to "pre-identify who's the next person who's going to harm a child," he said.

"Trust me, we have been looking for a profile. I have ordered a profile but nobody's been able to deliver it."

This is part of the reason judges, defense attorneys and prosecutors often focus on rehabilitating criminals, by giving them drug treatment, for example. It's not just that they're showing compassion. They're also trying to attack root causes of crime.

"We try to change that pattern of conduct so they can shake the demons and lead a law-abiding life," said Hillsborough State Attorney Mark Ober, speaking specifically about prosecuting drug addicts. But if addicts who are supposed to be getting drug treatment violate their probation, "Then they certainly risk going to prison or jail.'


* * *

Christopher M. Payton took that risk, several times.

Payton pleaded no contest to misdemeanor battery in 1994 in Broward County, after police said he slugged his pregnant girlfriend, who had blood streaming down her face. He also pleaded no contest to domestic violence battery in 2000 in Lake County after hitting a different girlfriend, swinging her around by her hair and smashing her windshield with his fist. He was arrested again for domestic battery on that same girlfriend in Clearwater in 2000, but in that case charges were dropped.

"He was an abuser. . . . He definitely had some problems," said the 42-year-old victim of the latter two cases, whose name is being withheld because she fears being found by Payton.

In spite of his domestic violence cases, plus a felony conviction for driving with a suspended license and other misdemeanors, Payton's record did not qualify him for a minimum prison sentence under state sentencing guidelines.

Payton was put on two years' probation through drug court, a program designed to help addicts get treatment and stop committing crimes.

He did not do well. Payton violated his probation by twice testing positive for drug use in 2002; by getting cited for having an open container of alcohol in June 2003; and by failing to report to his probation officer in July 2003, court records show. His probation was extended. After he failed to make a required probation report this January, a warrant was issued for his arrest. Payton, who is 31, has not been found. "I can't even believe that they just let him go," his ex-girlfriend said. Her solution: "Put him in jail, because I think that's why he continues to do it. . . . He's been getting away with it."


* * *

Although many people go straight to prison after violating probation, there also are several ways people avoid it. Judges sometimes give extra chances to addicts, hoping to prod them into treatment while they're on probation. Widespread plea bargaining also has an effect because offenders sometimes plead guilty to reduced charges, and criminal backgrounds filled with misdemeanors look less threatening than records covered with felonies.

Judges also sometimes are not given complete information about the criminals they are sentencing, even though many court records are computerized. A case in point: Joseph P. Smith.

After Smith's arrest in connection with the death of Carlie Brucia, who was abducted as she walked home from a friend's house in February, a storm of controversy centered on the judge who did not send Smith back to jail after he failed to pay court fees. The state Department of Corrections, which oversees most probationers, quickly pointed out that it had asked Sarasota Circuit Judge Harry Rapkin to send Smith back to jail.

But the violation reports prepared by the DOC's probation officers offer little to suggest that they saw Smith as a dangerous person or someone who had been violent in the past.

The DOC's Dec. 30, 2003, violation report about Smith noted that he had failed to pay $170 of his $411 in court costs, but it did not list Smith's arrest history or attempt to assess whether he was a violent person. It also did not mention that Smith had performed badly on probation before, even earning a prison sentence because he had violated probation after a 2000 drug case.

In fact, this DOC report did not explicitly recommend jail for Smith any more than Rapkin did. It recommended that Smith "remain on supervision," rather than return to court to have his probation revoked.

Asked about this apparent contradiction, DOC Regional Director Joe Papy said the DOC also had separately prepared a warrant to present to the judge for Smith's arrest, as it does routinely in these cases. He acknowledged the probation officer made "a clerical error" by not checking a box on the form requesting for Smith to be returned for a hearing.

Probation officers also prepared a violation report in an earlier drug case, but it too was incomplete. One line on this 2001 report reads "PRINCIPAL/SEE PROGRESS DOCKET ENTRY" and lists a case number, along with the phrase "ADJUDICATION WITHHELD." That's the only hint that Smith in 1993 had pleaded no contest to aggravated battery for smashing his motorcycle helmet into a woman's face. The report did not mention that just two months before the report was written, a man had sought an injunction against Smith, saying that he "unexpectedly punched me in the face, breaking my nose and possibly tearing my left retina."

Papy said judges always can ask probation officers for additional information. And since the Joseph Smith case came to light, he said, probation officers are under instructions to write more detailed reports. They also are including state and national rap sheets along with their reports.

DOC secretary Crosby said he thinks probation officers did a good job in Smith's case, but acknowledged that in general, "there should have been more information in the past given to the judges." He said probation officers have been reminded "to tell everything they know about the person in the report."

A probation reform bill that would have required more comprehensive summaries passed the Florida Senate this year but failed to win approval in the House in the hectic final days of the legislative session. The proposal also would have required the DOC to prepare a "risk assessment" system to calculate which offenders on probation were most likely to commit new crimes.

The original bill also would have imposed five-year prison terms on certain probation violators with violent histories, but that provision was removed in the final version. Sen. Victor Crist, R-Tampa, said he thinks most legislators support changing the system and said he or another senator will make sure it comes to a debate again next year.

But no probation system will be perfect, said Ober, the Hillsborough state attorney.

"We're dealing with humans making those types of predictions about someone's future, and I would hate to be the person making any type of prediction about someone's conduct for tomorrow because it is virtually impossible," he said. "We literally take chances every day on people that we put on supervision."

- Times Staff writer Richard Raeke can be reached at 727 869-6236 or rraeke@sptimes.com Dong-Phuong Nguyen can be reached at (813) 226-3403 or nguyen@sptimes.com and Curtis Krueger can be reached at (727) 893-8232 or krueger@sptimes.com Times computer-assisted reporting specialist Constance Humburg contributed to this report.

ABOUT THIS STORY
The St. Petersburg Times received a database from the state Department of Corrections listing all people who have been accused of violating their probation from July 2001 to January 2004.

Times computer-assisted reporting specialist Constance Humburg then matched this information to another DOC database to determine which of these people had committed a violent offense in the past.

The data showed:

A total of 70,762 people on probation during this period were accused of violating probation at least once. In some cases, the violations were confirmed; in other cases, they were not.

A total of 1,875 of these people were accused of five or more violations of their probation.

Of these 1,875 people, 426 previously had been convicted of at least one violent offense on a list of offenses chosen by Times reporters and editors.

Defendants considered violent under the Times analysis committed at least two counts of battery on a law enforcement officer or at least one count of the following offenses: robbery, home invasion robbery, aggravated assault, assault, sexual battery, aggravated battery, battery, lewd and lascivious behavior, false imprisonment, shooting missiles into a dwelling or vehicle, aggravated child abuse, carjacking, murder or manslaughter-culpable negligence.
The Times also screened for a number of other violent offenses that did not turn up among the multiple probation violators, including kidnapping, attempted murder and aggravated stalking.

By the numbers
199,215: Number of people on probation in April according to Florida Department of Corrections

43,823: Number of those people who had run away or failed to contact probation officers

36,123: Of people who had not disappeared, number with pending probation violations

16.2 percent: Portion of people serving probation in April who were doing so for commiting violent offenses

- Source: Department of Corrections
..Source.. by CURTIS KRUEGER, RICHARD RAEKE and DONG-PHUONG NGUYEN

Mechanic Charged In Carlie's Death

Prior to the crime of murdering Carlie Brucia this man DID NOT have a history of any sex offense! And was on probation for other offenses.
2-6-2004 Florida:

11-Year-Old Carlie Brucia's Body Found On Church Grounds Overnight

(CBS/AP) The body of an 11-year-old girl whose abduction was captured by a surveillance camera has been found in a church parking lot and a mechanic has been charged with her murder, officials said Friday.

"The body of a beautiful girl, Carlie Brucia, has been found," said an emotional Sarasota County Sheriff Bill Balkwill Friday morning. "Joseph Smith is under arrest for the abduction and murder of Carlie."

Her body was found on the grounds of the Central Church of Christ. A section of its grounds was ringed with yellow police tape Friday.

"Our prayers on behalf of everybody here in Sarasota County go out to the family," Balkwill said.

Smith, 37, is believed to be the tattooed man in a mechanic's shirt who was seen in the car wash's surveillance video leading Carlie away by the arm Sunday evening.

No cause of death of was given.

"We now stand ready to complete our obligation, and assure you that he will pay the ultimate price for what he did to her," Capt. Jeff Bell said.

Investigators found the body after negotiations with Smith, said a source, who spoke on condition of anonymity. Earlier, authorities had said he was not cooperating.

Outside Carlie's school, McIntosh Middle School principal Robert Hagemann announced there were about 30 counselors available for the students.

"They're here in force today. They have saturated the school with personnel and resources," he told reporters. They will be back on Monday, he added, and the school will be open Saturday midday and Monday evening for additional counseling.

"We are going to do whatever is necessary for the children and for the community," he said.

Carlie's friend Natalie Thomas cried after hearing that her classmate's body was found. She remembered Carlie's smile and that she liked to go on walks.

Carlie was described by friends as a beautiful girl who loved actress Jennifer Lopez, going to the mall and hanging out. The youngster was known for greeting friends with warm hugs.

"I just want to thank everybody for all they've done," said her father, Joseph Brucia, who is separated from her mother, at a press conference in Sarasota Friday.

"There's nothing you can do to make anybody feel better and it's going to hurt for a long, long time," said Chuck Chambers, a private investigator who was working with the family.

Smith had been held without bail since Tuesday on an alleged probation violation stemming from a cocaine possession conviction.

Smith has been arrested at least 13 times in Florida since 1993, according to state records. He was arrested in 1997 in Manatee County on kidnapping and false imprisonment charges, but was acquitted a year later.

He served 17 months in state prison for heroin possession and prescription drug fraud and was released on New Year's Day 2003. He was arrested eight days later on a cocaine possession charge and was placed on probation for three years. He also was placed on probation for aggravated battery in 1993 and heroin charges in 1999.

A state Department of Corrections official said Thursday that a probation officer had asked a judge on Dec. 30 to declare Smith in violation of his probation because he had not paid all his fines and court costs.

Probation official Joe Papy said Circuit Judge Harry Rapkin declined to find Smith in violation, which could have returned him to jail.


An aide to Smith's public defender, Adam Tebrugge, declined comment Thursday. ..Source.. by Tatiana Morales


The problem with probation

6-13-2004 Florida:

Hundreds of violent offenders in Florida are still on probation even after repeatedly breaking the rules. The solution? Officials don't really have one.

For the remainder of this article: by CURTIS KRUEGER, RICHARD RAEKE and DONG-PHUONG NGUYEN