Remember Thomas Mortimer IV, the Winchester, MA man accused of four murders? After a long time without any hearings in his case, there was a pretty big one today. Mortimer’s defense team filed a two motions to suppress evidence, one based on a warrantless search and the other on a search that exceeded the scope of the warrant.
Mortimer, 44, stands accused of the first-degree murders of his wife, Laura Stone Mortimer, mother-in-law Ragna Ellen Stone, and children Thomas “Finn” Mortimer V and Charlotte Mortimer. Seven witnesses took the stand today, including Laura’s sister, Debra Stone Sochat, to describe the day the four bodies were discovered.
Mortimer entered the courtroom at about 9:10, calm and somewhat detached-looking, wearing the same outfit that he has worn at previous hearings – a light blue shirt, crimson tie, and khaki pants. He wore handcuffs and chains around his ankles for the entire hearing and sat at the defense table with his lawyers, Denise Regan and Eva Vekos.
The hearing, before Middlesex Superior Court Judge Leila R. Kern, opened with a brief discussion of a defense motion to sequester the witnesses. Assistant District Attorney Adrienne Lynch argued that Debra Sochat should be allowed to watch the other witnesses’ testimony because “she is the survivor of these four homicide victims and she would like to be at the hearing.” Both sides quickly agreed that Debra, the second witness of the day, should sit out the first witness’s testimony but could be there for the rest.
Here is a rundown of what we learned at the hearing, witness by witness:
Daniel P. Murphy is Debra Stone Sochat’s neighbor. A retired mechanic at the Winchester Department of Public Works, he is friendly with many of the police and firefighters in the town. He described how on June 16, 2010 he drove with Debra and her two children to the home at 2 Windsong Lane where her mother, sister, niece, nephew, and brother-in-law lived. Debra was worried because she hadn’t been able to reach her mother in two days. After unsuccessfully trying all the doors and looking in the windows, Murphy offered to kick down the main door, between the house and the garage, but ended up calling the Winchester Police Department when they noticed that the house had an alarm that might go off. While waiting for the police to arrive, Murphy saw a chilling sight through the windows near the main door: “some bloodstains on the floor and on the switch if you look through the window.” Firefighters broke open the door and he and Debra followed. “I got about two steps in the door,” Murphy testified, when the firefighters “rushed us out of the house.” He tried to calm Debra down, saying “she was just worried and nervous about her mother…had a feeling like there might have been something bad like she fell down the stairs or something.”
Debra Stone Sochat, Laura Mortimer’s sister and Ellen Stone’s daughter, took the stand looking somber but composed, with a black v-neck dress and her blond hair in a bun. “I saw my mother every day,” she said, adding that she spoke to her “at least five times a day.” Her parents, Ellen and David Stone, had owned the Windsong Lane home for 35 years, but their divorce was just becoming finalized at the time of Ellen’s death, and David had moved out a while ago.
She had plans on June 15 to have Ellen over and prepare her mother’s favorite dinner. The last time the two spoke by phone, on June 14, Ellen “was really looking forward to having the dinner and she sounded very happy.” Debra also spoke to her sister on the 14th, about a possible trip to Martha’s Vineyard that weekend. “Tom didn’t really want to go but they were still talking about it and they were still thinking they were going to go,” Debra explained, adding that their father had bought a boat for 4-year-old Finn and wanted him to see it. The next morning, June 15th, Debra called Laura on her cell phone to set up a playdate for Finn, 2-year-old Charlotte, and her two children, Alexandra, 2 1/2, and Christian, 8 months. Tom answered, which Debra considered “very unusual.” “Hi Tom, how are you?” she asked. He replied, “Hi Debbie, how are you?” and told her when she asked for Laura, “She’s upstairs, she’s busy. She’ll have to call you back…It’s going to be a while before she calls you back.”
The entire day, Debra repeatedly tried to contact her mother, sister, and brother-in-law on their land lines and cell phones. She and her family even ate the dinner they had prepared for Ellen, thinking that she may have just lost her phone, which she had done “many times before.” When neither Ellen’s best friend nor her brother had heard from her, Debra’s husband, David Sochat, became worried, saying “I think we should go over there. I have a funny feeling that something’s wrong.” However, Debra vetoed the idea because “Laura and Tom have a very strict schedule with the children. They’re always in bed by 8:30…They’re very regimented with their schedule.”
The next morning, however, when she still could not reach anyone, Debra decided to go over. Her concern grew when she saw that the trash barrels were still out in the street from the day before, and that the cars were not arranged how they usually were. “I knew at that point that something was strange,” she testified. She and her neighbor, Dan Murphy, tried all the windows and doors but heard nothing except Ellen’s dog barking in an upstairs bedroom. Through the windows near the front door she saw “a light switch on the wall…which had blood on it.” She added, “There was blood smeared on the panel of the wood going up the stairs, there was blood on the floor, there was blood on the wall going up the stairs.” The oriental rug that Ellen had just gotten cleaned and “had been asking Tom for months to help put down” was missing. “I was hoping in my heart that it was a misunderstanding and I didn’t want the police to show up,” she said, but eventually she and Murphy agreed that calling the police was the best thing to do. Lt. Steven Osborne of the Winchester Fire Department arrived, entered the house, and “told me to leave immediately, that my mother had fallen.” Debra explained that her mother “had some medical issues so I was very worried.” She waited in the car with her children, who kept asking whether they would get to see “Cha Cha,” their nickname for their grandmother. Finally, officers came out of the house and told Debra the tragic news.
When asked what she would have done if the police hadn’t come, she said, ”I would have thrown a rock through a window and gone in myself to check on my mother.”
Lt. Steven Osborne of the Winchester Fire Department responded to Dan Murphy’s call and was the first to enter the Windsong Lane house to conduct a well-being check. He explained that he regularly conducts well-being checks when there is a person that family members or neighbors can’t get in touch with and are worried about. He broke down the door to the house after walking around and knocking on all the doors unsuccessfully. “I saw a person lying on the floor,” he said, and nearby he saw a child’s body covered with a blanket, which he lifted up to reveal a “large wound to the neck.” He “immediately realized it was a crime scene and backed out of the building,” and informed the police when they arrived that there were two bodies in the house. During cross-examination by defense attorney Regan, he admitted that the fire department has no written guidelines or formal training regarding well-being checks.
Officer Claude Austin of the Winchester Police Department responded to the house and was told by Osborne, “It’s bad, we have two bodies.” He told his officers to spread out around the house and went inside. The bodies near the main door were “basically covered with blood” and there were “trails of blood” on the floor, as well as bloody footprints leading to the living room. The boy’s body – which turned out to be Finn – was “ice cold” and “laying over a pool of blood, his throat had been sliced, his eyes were open, pale to the touch, just lifeless.” The woman’s body nearby – later identified as Laura – was surrounded by 4-5 pints of blood, and Austin said, “the only way to tell where the face was, as opposed to the back of the head, was hair.” A roll of paper towels was on the floor nearby, “as if someone was trying to clean up but it was something they couldn’t handle.” Leading to the front hallway were “drops of blood,” which he followed, with his gun drawn, and discovered Ellen’s body in the living room with a rug “placed right over the whole body…in a manner to just cover it.” More blood droplets led up the stairs, where Austin heard a TV and a dog barking and called for backup. He looked in all the rooms, noticing a frying pan on one bed, which he considered “peculiar,” and in what looked like a child’s bedroom found a horrible scene. In the crib, he said, “I saw a baby in a fetal position with a pool of blood underneath.” After scanning all the rooms – except the attic and basement – to make sure there were no injured or dangerous people – the officers left. In the garage Austin noticed that a garden hose was hooked up to the car’s exhaust, with the windows shut, which he described as consistent with a suicide attempt. Additionally, there were a knife and a hammer on the passenger seat. Finally, he entered the house a second time to escort the dog, who had been trapped in the upstairs bedroom, out of the house so he wouldn’t be running around in the crime scene.
Sgt. Thomas Groux came to the crime scene as Lt. Austin’s backup. “It’s bad in there,” Austin told him. He entered the house and saw the bodies, which he described as having “massive trauma,” with Laura in a “pool of blood” and Finn with his “throat cut to the point where throat organs were hanging out.” Like Austin did, he described finding Ellen’s body and the trail of blood droplets going up the stairs. “We started going up to commence a search of the second floor,” he said, where he found Charlotte’s body. “There was a massive amount of blood in the crib itself,” he said, adding that trauma to her neck was visible although she was partially covered by a blanket. After leaving the house, Groux was “unsatisfied with the protective sweep that we had done…I just didn’t think the home was searched thoroughly enough for safety reasons.” So he and three other officers re-entered the house to check the basement and the bedroom where the dog was, which Austin hadn’t entered because he didn’t want the dog to escape. On cross-examination, he admitted that another Winchester police officer, Det. Wilkinson, entered the house to take pictures but “disengaged” because state police were taking over the investigation. He could not be 100% sure that Lt. McDonnell (or anyone else) hadn’t re-entered the house after he left, and additionally he said that he did not see any notes or letters in the house, which is significant because Mortimer is reported to have left letters confessing to the killings.
After a lunch break we heard from Trooper Scott McCormack of the Massachusetts State Police. When he arrived on the scene he was told that the home wasn’t secured, so he conducted a protective sweep with Sgt. Groux and other officers. “There was a distinct smell of human decomposition,” he said. “Finn was lying on his back…he had a very deliberate wound to his neck. It was very significant. His eyes were half open. He was covered in blood. He was lying in a pool of blood.” Near the bodies of Laura and Ellen, he observed “a tremendous amount of blood,” signs of a struggle including an overturned plant, and “a very distinctive dragging pattern.” Along with the other officers, he conducted a sweep of the entire house, including the attic, saying that “obviously it would heighten your sense of security.” He never looked anywhere other than where a person could be hiding, he said, nor did he enter the house again before a search warrant was issued later in the day. He spoke to Lt. McDonnell outside the home and said, “He clearly had been moved from what he’d observed. He was very emotional.” During cross-examination, he said that he had never been told that Winchester police had searched most of the house. He said that he observed notes in the home only after the issuance of the warrant. Regan mentioned various things that had happened as a result of the entry into the home: Mortimer’s car was seized and searched, he was arrested and taken to the Winchester police station, injuries were observed on him, biological samples were taken from him, photographs were taken of him, he spoke to his parents by phone, and he was overheard saying certain things (it wasn’t mentioned what exactly what these things were), which were confirmed in subsequent interviews with his parents.
The final witness of the day, Lt. Peter McDonnell of the Winchester Police Department, responded to the initial call for a well-being check at the Windsong Lane home. Sgt. Groux told him of the four bodies and that one bedroom and the basement had not been secured, so he participated in checking the home thoroughly along with Groux and Trooper McCormack. He did not, however, move or take any items.
Throughout all this testimony, Mortimer showed little emotion, at times whispering and nodding to his lawyers and smiling briefly on one occasion.
The hearing adjourned for the day at 3:00 but is still not over. Testimony is set to continue on Monday morning, I believe with two firefighters called by the defense.
More articles about today’s hearing from AP, Boston Globe, NECN, Winchester Patch, and Winchester Star.