Letecia Stauch Guilty Of 11 Yr Olds Murder

Letecia Stauch

Letecia Stauch has been found guilty of the murder of her eleven year old stepson Gannon Stauch

According to court documents Letecia Stauch would beat, stab and shot the eleven year old boy back in 2020 at their El Paso Colorado home. Gannon Staunch would be found stuffed into a suitcase months later beneath a bridge in Florida

At first Letecia Stauch would tell police that eleven year old Gannon Stauch had run away and when that story fell apart she would tell authorities that a construction worker broke into the home, sexually assaulted her and then abducted the child. Then the story changed to that a man identified as Edgar kidnapped the boy and took him on a train and that Gannon father had owed Edgar money. The last story she tried was that a convicted sex offender had abducted the boy

Investigators would find a burner phone where Letecia Stauch has searched for such topics as how to beat a lie detector test along with a number of questions that she listed down that authorities may ask so she could practice

Letecia Stauch was finally arrested and when she went to trial she decided to try for a guilty by reasons of insanity however the jury would not go for it and she was finally convicted

Letecia Stauch would be sentenced to two life sentences with no chance of parole

Letecia Stauch More News

U.S.
Colorado jury finds Letecia Stauch guilty of killing 11-year-old stepson

May 8, 2023 / 6:53 PM / AP

Jurors found a Colorado woman guilty of murder in the death of her 11-year-old stepson on Monday, rejecting her claim that she was insane when she attacked him.

Letecia Stauch was convicted of all charges she faced in Gannon Stauch’s killing, over three years after prosecutors said she stabbed Gannon 18 times before hitting him in the head and then shooting him once. Prosecutors claimed Stauch killed the boy in January 2020 because she hated him and wanted to hurt his father, Al Stauch, whom she planned to leave and who was away on a National Guard deployment at the time.

Stauch did not deny killing Gannon and taking his body across the country in a suitcase in the back of a rented van. But she pleaded not guilty by reason of insanity. The defense argued that she killed Gannon during a “psychotic break” caused by trauma from being physically, emotionally and sexually abused during her childhood.

Experts at the state mental hospital concluded that Stauch had a personality disorder with borderline and narcissistic features but was sane at the time Gannon was killed. Under Colorado law, that means understanding the difference between right and wrong and being able to form the intent to commit a crime.

The main defense witness, Dr. Dorothy Lewis, author of the book “Crazy, Not Insane” and featured in an HBO documentary with the same title, concluded Stauch suffered from dissociative identity disorder — when someone has two or more personalities as the result of trauma — and was not sane at the time Gannon was killed.

In the weeks leading up to Gannon’s killing, Stauch was diagnosed with generalized anxiety disorder after she was referred to a psychologist while being treated in a military health clinic. Therapist Ronda Niederhauser testified that Stauch did not show any signs of being a threat to herself or others and was aware of her surroundings.

Authorities believe Stauch killed Gannon in his bedroom a few hours before reporting him missing on Jan. 27, 2020, saying he had not come home from playing with friends. Dozens of volunteers helped search for the boy in the area around where the family lived near Colorado Springs. However, investigators later revealed that Stauch concocted a variety of stories to mislead them, including that a man she hired to repair a carpet raped her and then abducted Gannon.

After Al Stauch became suspicious of his wife, he allowed the FBI to listen in on his phone calls with Stauch, trying to draw out more information from her about where Gannon was. Hours of audio from those calls along with video recordings of interviews with Stauch about her mental health were a prominent part of the evidence offered during the five-week trial.

Gannon’s remains were found by bridge inspectors in March 2020, inside a suitcase under a bridge on the Florida Panhandle. Prosecutors suggested that Stauch snuck out from a hotel room where she was staying with her daughter in Pensacola to dispose of his body in the middle of the night, hoping it would be swept into the Gulf of Mexico.

Stauch was convicted of first-degree murder after deliberation, first-degree murder of a child by a person in a position of trust, tampering with a deceased human body and tampering with physical evidence.

She did not appear to show any reaction to the verdict as it was read, sitting at the defense table between her two lawyers. Later, as everyone milled around court talking, she sat there alone, taking sips of water.

https://www.cbsnews.com/news/letecia-stauch-found-guilty-killing-11-year-old-stepson-gannon-stauch/

Letecia Stauch Murders Stepson Gannon Staunch

Letecia Stauch

Letecia Stauch is a woman from Colorado who has been charged with the murder of her eleven year old stepson Gannon Staunch. According to court documents Letecia Stauch would shoot and stab the eleven year old boy while his father was serving in the National Guard. Letecia Stauch would tell police that Gannon had disappeared after going to a friends house. Police in Florida would find the eleven year old’s remain stuck in a suitcase and underneath a bridge in Pensacola.

Letecia Stauch whose trial is going to begin at the end of March 2022 has recently changed her plea to not guilty by reason of insanity. Since being locked up Letecia Stauch has faced additional charges for attacking a deputy and planning a jail break.

Letecia Stauch More News

On Friday, an El Paso County woman accused of killing her 11-year-old stepson, Gannon Stauch, asked to change her plea to not guilty by reason of insanity.

The judge said he will allow the plea to go forward, but Stauch will have to go through a mental health evaluation.

The evaluation is expected to take longer than normal and the judge said he did not know if the trial date was “in jeopardy”.

Investigators believe Letecia Stauch killed her stepson in their Lorson Ranch home on January 27, 2020, before driving his body to the Florida panhandle where it was eventually discovered in March 2020.

Stauch faces over a dozen charges, including first-degree murder.

Stauch’s defense also asked for a motion not to have a jury due to a large amount of publicity the case has received, which will make it difficult to find a fair jury.

Stauch’s defense attorney said he wants more time to discuss the jury with Stauch, since the decision is ultimately hers.

Both the judge and the prosecution argued that waiving a jury would be premature.

The judge went on to address Stauch directly and said without a jury, she gives up the possibility of a second chance at a trial. He went on to ensure her that, in his experience, jurors come in with an open mind.

“I think jurors really, really take their obligation seriously,” said the judge. “They are going to decide this case based on fact.”

The judge says he believes they should vacate the trial date and keep the March 17 date as the next court appearance.

The trial date will depend on when the mental health evaluation is completed.

https://www.koaa.com/news/covering-colorado/letecia-stauch-pleads-not-guilty-by-reason-of-insanity

Letecia Stauch Other News

Thursday pleaded not guilty to first-degree murder and 12 other charges.

In addition to the murder charge, Stauch’s charges include child abuse and tampering with evidence related to the killing of 11-year-old Gannon Stauch. If convicted of the top charge, she faces life in prison.

Stauch appeared in the courtroom for the first time in months after opting to appear virtually for earlier hearings. Fourth Judicial District Judge Gregory Werner ordered she appear in-person to enter a plea. She wore a short-sleeved, orange jumpsuit and shackles around her hands and ankles that attached to a chain around her waist.

Though the not guilty plea was not for reason of insanity, defense attorney Josh Tolini notified the court that he would likely be entering evidence from a mental health expert on at least some of the charges, though not specifically related to the murder count.

Colorado law says Stauch must now undergo a mental health evaluation, Tolini said after the hearing; he and District Attorney Michael Allen, the lead prosecutor on the case, will argue at a December court date about the “fine minutia” of what that evaluation could look like.

Allen said after the hearing that the move was “a little bit rare.” 

Multiple mental health experts had previously determined Stauch was competent, causing the judge to determine in January that she could stand trial.

Werner on Thursday scheduled the trial for March 28. It is expected to last about six weeks.

Investigators believe Stauch killed Gannon sometime after 2 p.m. on Jan. 27, 2020. She seemingly cooperated with authorities who were searching for Gannon when he was reported missing, but authorities quickly began to suspect a homicide. Deputies searched the Stauch home on Feb. 3.

The Santa Rosa Sheriff’s Office in Florida announced it had found Gannon’s body less than two months later on March 18. Santa Rosa County is on the Florida Panhandle, east of Pensacola.

Investigators determined that Gannon was shot in the head and stabbed in the chest and back.

A weapons expert determined bullets found in Gannon’s head and his pillowcase matched the type of ammunition used in a gun found on the nightstand in Stauch’s bedroom. The gun had Stauch’s DNA on it, but also the DNA of at least two other people, an investigator testified.

Investigators found Gannon’s blood on the bed, on the wall next to it and stained into the floor beneath it.

Defense attorneys sought to create doubt that Stauch committed the murder by suggesting that someone else could have entered the home around the time Gannon died, and sought to tie home security data with the unknown DNA on the gun investigators found.

But FBI agent Andrew Cohen testified in September that Stauch was the only person investigators believe could have committed the murder.

“I haven’t seen any evidence of anyone else coming into the house,” Cohen said

https://gazette.com/news/courts/letecia-stauch-accused-of-killing-stepson-enters-plea-on-murder-and-other-charges/article_5e944536-3d84-11ec-8a04-f390620705cb.html