Friday, July 26, 2013

Prosecutors in talks over plea deal in Cleveland kidnappings, sources say

Aaron Josefczyk / Reuters

Ariel Castro at a pretrial hearing on Wednesday.

By Kate Snow, Richard Esposito and Erin McClam, NBC News

Prosecutors are in talks with Ariel Castro, the Cleveland man accused of kidnapping three women and holding them captive for a decade, about a plea deal that could allow him to avoid the death penalty, sources told NBC News on Thursday.

The sources said an agreement was expected as early as Friday.

Such a deal would forestall a trial, a prospect that threatened to force the city of Cleveland, not to mention the three women, to relive tales of what prosecutors say was Castro?s horror house of torture and rape.

?They?re hopeful that it?s going to come to a speedy conclusion,? Kathryn Joseph, a lawyer for one of the women, said Thursday.

Earlier this month, prosecutors heaped hundreds more criminal charges on Castro, bringing the total number of counts he faced to 977. He pleaded not guilty July 17 at a hearing in which the judge had to ask him to keep his eyes open.

The charges included kidnapping, rape, assault and attempted murder. The attempted murder charge was filed because one of the women told investigators that Castro had impregnated her and forced her to miscarry.

The women ? Amanda Berry, Gina DeJesus and Michelle Knight ? were kidnapped between 2002 and 2004, according to investigators. They were freed in May after Berry broke partway through a door and screamed for help while Castro was out of the house.

The women broke their silence in a three-minute video July 9. In it, Knight said: ?I may have been through hell and back, but I am strong enough to walk through hell with a smile on my face, and my head held high, and my feet firmly on the ground.?

The lead prosecutor in the case, Timothy McGinty of Cuyahoga County, never said whether he would seek the death penalty, only that he was considering it.

A trial was set to begin in August, and lawyers for the three women said that they wanted it wrapped up as soon as possible.

Castro is being held on $8 million bail.

This story was originally published on

Source: http://feeds.nbcnews.com/c/35002/f/663306/s/2f277b65/sc/11/l/0Lusnews0Bnbcnews0N0C0Inews0C20A130C0A70C250C196795760Eprosecutors0Ein0Etalks0Eover0Eplea0Edeal0Ein0Ecleveland0Ekidnappings0Esources0Esay0Dlite/story01.htm

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