TheDenverChannel.com









Denver News
E-Mail News Alerts
Get breaking news and daily headlines.
Browse all e-mail newsletters

Death Penalty Phase Begins In Denver Federal Trial

Man Found Guilty Of Killing Fellow Inmate, Gutting Victim In Cell

POSTED: 4:34 am MDT March 20, 2007

A man convicted of killing a fellow inmate and displaying his cut out intestines should be spared execution because he has mental problems and was a good family man before going to prison, his attorney said Monday.

The death penalty phase of William Sablan's trial began in U.S. District Court with the same jury that convicted him last week of first-degree murder. He's the first federal inmate since Timothy Mc Veigh to face the death penalty.

Sablan, 42, and his cousin, Rudy Sablan, 37, are the first federal defendants in Colorado to face the death penalty since Oklahoma City bomber Timothy McVeigh. They were charged with killing Joey Jesus Estrella Oct. 10, 1999, after a night of drinking homemade wine and fighting in the cell they shared at the federal penitentiary in Florence.

Rudy Sablan's trial date hasn't been set.

Assistant U.S. Attorney Brenda Taylor told jurors that prosecutors will show that Sablan will continue to be dangerous if he remains in prison. She said Sablan has thrown coffee at a prison guard and threatened to kill security personnel.

Prosecutors said Rudy Sablan strangled Estrella with a headphone cord and that William Sablan used a prison-issue disposable razor to slash Estrella's neck. An autopsy showed Estrella bled to death and that some of his organs were removed after he died.

Early in the trial, prosecutors showed jurors a videotape shot by prison guards after they saw the carnage inside the cell. The tape showed William Sablan holding up Estrella's intestines and making obscene gestures.

William Sablan, a native of Saipan in the Northern Mariana Islands, has a criminal history dating to 1984 that includes convictions for holding a couple at knifepoint, attacking two men on a golf course and attempting to strangle a shop owner with a telephone cord. While in prison for the golf-course attack, he and other inmates "took over" the prison, holding a group of Chinese inmates hostage, according to court filings.

The penalty phase of the trial is expected to last three weeks.


Links We Like

Sponsored Content
Everyone needs iron in their diet. Find out which foods are the best sources. Some of them might surprise you! More

Before beginning a remodeling project be sure to research your money saving options. More

Use these helpful hints to better understand how your parents are feeling as they enter the Autumn stages of life. More

Looking to invest in foreclosed real estate? Find hundreds of locations including vacation hot spots here. More

Like online video? Then you'll love Now See This.

Links We Like includes a selection of information, tools and resources from our partners and sponsors.
Sponsored Links
Credit Report
See Your Complete Credit Picture. Get your Experian, Equifax & Transunion Credit Score & Report Instantly. View Online for free. More