Tag: Shelly Orio

  • Cold Case: 20 years later, DNA evidence ties man to rape of Fair Oaks teen

    forensics lab
    File photo, forensics lab. // Public domain

    Note: although The Sentinel typically does not cover crimes outside of Citrus Heights, exceptions are made if the crime is largely under reported in regional media and occurred in close proximity to Citrus Heights. The role of DNA evidence in this cold case also played an issue in our decision to cover this crime. Reader discretion is advised due to the nature of the crimes.

    Two decades after a masked man entered a Fair Oaks home, tied up a mother and her two daughters at gunpoint and raped one of them, a 35-year-old man has plead guilty to the 1997 crime. Though unidentified for nearly 20 years, advancements in DNA technology later connected Joseph Brian Cox to a cigarette butt and a roll of tape found at the scene, the Sacramento County District Attorney’s Office said Wednesday.

    In a March 15 news release, the district attorney’s office said Cox plead guilty to three counts of “forcible digital penetration” and two counts of “forcible rape.” Cox, now 35, was a juvenile when he committed the crimes.

    On the morning of May 20, 1997, authorities said Cox unlawfully entered the home of the 14-year-old victim involved, wearing a mask and holding the family at gunpoint.

    “He proceeded to bind the hands and feet of the victim’s mother and sister with rope and tape,” the news release said. “He also bound the victim’s hands before forcibly sexually assaulting her in her bedroom.”

    Before fleeing the scene, authorities said Cox smoked a cigarette in the victim’s room and looted the house for cash and valuables.

    As DNA testing of items from the scene initially did not yield “significant results,” the investigation stalled and was assigned to the Sacramento County Sheriff’s Department Cold Case Unit, the DA’s statement said. As technology advanced, the items were submitted to the DA’s crime lab for testing and resulted in “a hit” to Cox.

    Tape used to tie up the family members contained key DNA evidence, as well as the cigarette butt found at the scene.

    According to online inmate records, Cox was booked into the Sacramento County Main Jail on Jan. 6, 2015. His sentencing date is set for April 28, 2017, where he faces a maximum sentence of 20 years in prison, according to the district attorney’s office.

    DA Spokeswoman Shelly Orio later confirmed with The Sentinel that the crime occurred in Fair Oaks, but she was not able to verify what city Cox was a resident of in 1997, or more recently.

  • Murder: Citrus Heights man sentenced to 50 years to life

    Murder: Citrus Heights man sentenced to 50 years to life

    Luther Devon Frazier, Shaun Blechinger
    Luther Devon Frazier, then 34, was charged and convicted of the murder of 22-year-old Shaun Blechinger in March, 2015. // Booking photo courtesy, CHPD

    Updated April 8, 6:53 p.m.–
    Luther Devon Frazier was sentenced to 50 years to life in prison Friday, after being convicted by a jury last month for the murder of 22-year-old Shaun Blechinger near the 6500 block of Greenback Lane in 2015.

    Frazier, a Citrus Heights resident, was initially scheduled for sentencing on April 6, but that date was delayed until April 8.

    According to court documents and a Sacramento County District Attorney’s Office news release, Frazier pled “not guilty” to the murder charge, but a jury found him guilty of first-degree murder on March 10, just over a year after the March 6, 2015 shooting occurred.

    Authorities said Frazier had purchased heroin from Blechinger over several months, eventually allowing use of his car in exchange for the drug. After Blechinger wrecked Frazier’s car and refused to pay for damages, Frazier then sought to collect the money, bringing along a gun he stole from his father.

    The two met in an alley near the 6500 block of Greenback Lane, where they “exchanged words,” the DA’s Office said. While Blechinger was walking back to his apartment, Frazier shot him six times, killing him.

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    Blechinger’s murder was one of three separate homicides in Citrus Heights during a particularly bloody month of March last year.

    [From 2015: Police make arrest in 3rd Citrus Heights homicide in March]

    According to court records, Frazier was still on probation for a prior felony domestic violence incident when he shot and killed Blechinger.

    Frazier’s case was prosecuted by Sacramento County Deputy District Attorney Kevin Greene. He was sentenced by Sacramento Superior Court Judge Helena Gweon.