Trending Topics

Ohio deputy expresses doubt over guilt of death row inmate

The Associated Press

COLUMBUS, Ohio- A former sheriff’s deputy who was part of the investigation into the killing of a woman nearly 25 years ago now says he has doubts about the state’s case against the man sentenced to death in her murder.

“I’m not aware of any tangible physical evidence,” former Hancock County sheriff’s deputy Brad Bell told The Columbus Dispatch and the Ohio News Network about the investigation in the 1982 killing of 48-year-old Betty Jane Mottinger.

After all this time, he said, “Something doesn’t smell right to me as far as what went on there.”

John Spirko was convicted of killing Mottinger, a postal supervisor who was abducted and repeatedly stabbed, then wrapped in a tarp and dumped in a field. Her body was found three weeks later in Hancock County in northwest Ohio.

Back then, Bell believed postal inspectors had proved that Spirko was guilty, but now he has doubts.

The media organizations looked into the Spirko case, reviewing documents and conducting interviews over two months, for a story prepared for release on Sunday.

Gov. Bob Taft has delayed Spirko’s execution three times, most recently in January to allow more time for DNA testing. It is now set for July 19.

“All I want is justice. Period,” said Spirko, 59, being held at the Ohio Penitentiary. “I spent 24 years now in a cage for something I didn’t do.”

Relatives of Mottinger continue to believe Spirko is guilty

“I hope we’ll have peace of mind, what they call closure,” said John Schroeder, 74, Mottinger’s brother. “I just want to see this thing over with. She was my baby sister, and I loved her dearly.”

Spirko was arrested after he contacted federal authorities about the murder. He said he only knew about the crime from reading newspapers and made the call to cut a deal for a girlfriend who had been charged with aiding him in an attempted escape from the Fulton County Jail.

Paul Hartman, a U.S. postal inspector, met with Spirko 16 times. Now 59 and retired, Hartman said he has no doubt that Spirko is guilty.

“Not withstanding all of the lies that he told, there were sprinkled among these various stories, various details, intimate details that could only have been known to the people who committed the offense,” Hartman said. “Now he’s trying to lie his way off of death row.”

Among details Spirko told investigators were what clothes and jewelry Mottinger was wearing the day she was killed.