Sentence Offers Relief From Grief: Victims' Relatives, Neighbors Praise Ruling, but Loss Endures
The Spokesman-Review
Aug. 28--Before 2005, Wolf Lodge Bay was a place to eat a
steak, watch ospreys hunt fish in Lake Coeur d'Alene or find an easy
campsite.
Now it's also the site of the empty house where a killer and
child rapist came searching for prey on May 16, 2005. Along with
committing the sexual assaults and four murders that followed,
Joseph Edward Duncan III changed the community's sense of place.
"The impact is so far-reaching. We thought we had a
quiet community," Kootenai County Sheriff Rocky Watson said.
"Now it's not unusual to drive through this community and see a
'Kill Duncan' bumper sticker on a nice car. I can never even guess
the reach of the effect on this community by this killer."
Amber Deahn, 28, was working the late shift as a waitress at
a Coeur d'Alene Denny's on July 2, 2005, when Duncan and Shasta
Groene re-emerged there after a nearly seven-week hideout in
Montana. As Coeur d'Alene police officers led Duncan from the
restaurant, Deahn asked Shasta her name before lifting the girl into
a teary embrace.
"Our children are our most precious gift on this
planet," Deahn, a mother of three, said Wednesday. "To
have that innocence ripped away from a child is unacceptable. Every
child should be allowed to be a child."
Deahn, whose Army Reserve husband is awaiting redeployment
to the Middle East, said she hopes to travel to California to follow
Duncan's case in the killing of Anthony Martinez.
The death sentence delivered Wednesday "is a little bit
of relief. Shasta will have some closure and justice will be done
for her family when he receives the death penalty," she said.
"Ms. Martinez deserves that closure just as much as any other
mother. Until there is closure for those families, for me it's not
over yet."
Deahn hopes media attention surrounding Duncan's case leads
to harsher sentences for child predators.
"We know he was stalking this family. He was hanging
out at playgrounds," she said. "All you can do is take
that information and protect your children and the children of
neighbors."
Relief for relatives
Relatives of Duncan's victims said they hoped the death
sentence would begin to ease grief that has marked their lives since
that May day when Duncan killed Brenda and Slade Groene and Mark
McKenzie in their Wolf Lodge Bay home. After the murders, Duncan
fled with Shasta and Dylan Groene, torturing and eventually
murdering Dylan, 9.
Lee McKenzie-Wood, 66, McKenzie's mother, said she was
ecstatic when she heard about Duncan's death sentence.
"I haven't been this jacked up in a long time,"
she said. "It's like I've been locked up in a prison, and my
heart and mind have been locked up. When this verdict was released,
it flowed out of me. Tears flowed out of me."
McKenzie-Wood said her 37-year-old son and Brenda Groene,
40, had called for advice about canning the Thursday before Duncan
bound and bludgeoned them, along with Groene's 13-year-old son,
Slade Groene, to death with a FatMax claw hammer.
"They were going to get married in a few months,"
she said. "The healing will never come for me or the (rest of
the) McKenzie family."
Ralph McKenzie, Mark's father, said he didn't attend the
Boise trial because he didn't think he could sit through the
proceedings in the room with Duncan.
"This trial has been awful rough on all of us," he
said.
He wasn't surprised by the verdict -- he said he didn't see
how jurors could've reached any other -- but he was relieved.
"That gives us some closure," he said. "Now
we've just got to get on with our lives."
Asked if he thought Mark would have wanted the verdict, he
said: "Sure he would have."
Wendy Price, Steve Groene's sister and Shasta's aunt, said
she's not sure there will ever be closure, but Duncan's death
sentence will provide family members with some relief.
"Tragedy is not really an adequate word to describe
this," she said. "It's taken an awful toll."
Among the effects on Price: Not eating. Not sleeping. A new,
more frightened, perspective on the world. Price's first
granddaughter was born seven months ago; she now worries constantly.
"I'm scared for her to go to public school. I'm scared for her
to say 'Hi' to people in the supermarket," Price said.
Price said she believes Duncan's sentence will serve as a
warning to other predators. "You are not going to take our
children and kill our families. We will hunt you down and find
you," she said.
Family members of Duncan, 45, had nothing to say.
"I'm sorry, I have no comment," said his mother,
Lillian Duncan, who lives in an apartment in Tacoma.
"No, thank you," said a woman who answered the
phone at the Poulsbo home of Duncan's sister, Tina Novotney.
In Las Vegas, a man who answered the phone number listed for
Duncan's father and stepmother said the couple no longer lived
there.
'Scars in our community'
The trial process took longer than anticipated by Bob
Hollingsworth, a neighbor who found the Wolf Lodge Bay crime scene
after the slayings there.
"I expected this whole thing to be settled sometime in
2006," Hollingsworth said.
Execution is probably "the only solution to this
situation," Hollingsworth said. It's not a matter of malice or
vengeance, he said, "it's just a correct punishment."
Kootenai County Prosecutor Bill Douglas said the death
sentence should give the families and the community a chance to
begin a healing process.
"This has left deep scars in our community," he
said. "I think this is a good first step. Hopefully he will
never return."
Duncan won't be coming back to Coeur d'Alene on state
charges. He already received three life sentences for state
kidnapping convictions, and Douglas will agree to three more life
sentences on the murder convictions on hold during the federal
trial.
Although he believed the death sentence was "a slam
dunk" in the federal case, Douglas said he was "very, very
surprised" when Duncan demanded to represent himself, rather
than using an experienced team of death-penalty defenders, and then
offered little defense.
"By his just laying down, one wonders if this was the
result (Duncan) wanted," Douglas said.
McKenzie-Wood said she spent the day calling family members
with news of the verdict. She planned to celebrate with friends at a
Denny's in Post Falls. "It's just pure relief. I'm sure Mark is
looking down and cheering just like we are," she said. "If
he had the chance, he'd drink a beer. Both he and Brenda
would."
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