
Memory Of Murder
Who Would Want To
Brutally Attack The Perfect All-American Family With An Ax?
Nov. 4,
2006
(CBS)
During the early morning hours of Nov. 15, 2004, Peter and Joan Porco
were brutally attacked by an axe-wielding intruder in their bedroom.
Peter Porco was murdered, his wife left for dead.
Miraculously,
she was clinging on to life, when investigators and medics arrived at
the crime scene hours later. Suffering from severe injuries, police say
Joan Porco indicated to them who the killer was with a nod.
But as
Peter Van Sant reports, she says she has no memory of that. And she
says she never would have implicated the person who faced trial for the
murder of her husband.
Detective Chris
Bowdish couldn’t believe what he was seeing. Minutes after discovering
the body of Peter Porco, he was certain he was about to learn the
identity of the killer from Peter’s dying wife Joan.
"And I said to her, 'Can you hear me?' And she nodded her head yes. I
then started feeling that this woman knows what’s going on," he says.
Although Bowdish had only been in the house for minutes, he also felt
he knew what was going on. "I could see there was no break in. There
was no forced entry," he explains.
Instead of a broken lock, there was a house key in the front door. It
was a spare key that was usually hidden in a flower pot by the front
entrance.
"The house wasn’t what we call 'tossed.' The drawers weren’t pulled
out, they weren’t dumped," Bowdish says. In the dining room was Joan’s
purse and its contents, all undisturbed. Bowdish says he felt it was an
inside job.
But who would want to harm the Porcos? Married 30 years, the couple
lived in Bethlehem, N.Y., a bedroom community just outside of Albany.
They had two sons, 23-year-old Jonathan, in the Navy in South Carolina,
and 21-year-old Chris, a student at the University of Rochester.
In a strange coincidence, Det. Bowdish had met the Porcos two years
earlier, when they reported the theft of laptops during a burglary. He
also learned they had two sons. At the crime scene, he was wondering
about the whereabouts of Jonathan and Christopher.
As the paramedics struggled to get Joan oxygen, Bowdish approached her.
"I said, 'Did a family member do this to you?' And she nodded her head
up and down clearly, yes. Now everybody in the room’s standing there at
this point, I’ve got witnesses."
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Joan and Peter Porco

Christopher Porco
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First
responders Kevin Robert, Jim Regan, and Dennis Wood couldn’t believe
it. "I’ve never seen anybody with this massive of facial and head
trauma and still be alive and actually able to communicate like she
was," says Wood.
Joan had
been following directions like “straighten your arm” and “stop moving
your legs.” But this was different. Before their eyes, Joan was about
to identify the killer. The paramedics watched as she nodded her head
in response to the detective’s questions.
"And I
said to her 'Did Jonathan do this to you?' And she clearly shook her
back and forth, 'no.' At this point I knew she could hear me. I knew
she understood the answers to the questions," Bowdish remembers. "And I
said to her, 'Did Christopher do this to you?' And she then shook her
head up and down. She nodded. Yes he did."
Within
minutes, Joan was rushed to the hospital - and police began looking for
Christopher.
More than
200 miles away, Christopher says he didn’t know police wanted to talk
to him. He says he was in his dorm room when he got a phone call from a
local reporter.
"She asked
me if I had any comment on my parents being killed that day. I kind of
dropped the phone and was completely shocked, and you know disbelief,"
he recalls. "I called the Bethlehem Police Department."
When he
called police, Christopher asked whether the operator had any
information about his parents; the operator asked about his
whereabouts.
"The woman
on the phone said she couldn’t tell me anything but they would call me
back. So I sat in my room and waited," Christopher says.
Within the
hour, police confirmed his father was dead. Christopher’s brother
Jonathan learned the devastating news at his Navy base, as an uncle
rushed Christopher to his mother’s bedside at the hospital.
"I saw her
- she was swollen and covered in tubes. And my reaction was I burst
into tears. I fell on the floor right there," Christopher says.
As Joan
underwent emergency surgery, Christopher agreed to go to the police
station where he was questioned for six hours. "I wanted to be as
helpful as I could. I knew that in cases like this, you know, the
quicker the better. So I wanted to give them what they needed to figure
out who did it," he says.
Asked if
he carried out the deadly attack, Christopher says, "You know, I can’t
say enough, absolutely no. I would never do anything like that to
anyone let alone my parents who I love dearly."
Bowdish’s
number one priority was finding out where Christopher was at the time
of the attack.
Some 16
hours after Joan identified her son as her attacker, detectives were
knocking on doors at Christopher’s dorm. It quickly became clear that
none of his frat brothers could back up Christopher’s alibi that he was
asleep on the couch in the dorm lounge.
"It just
so happened that some guys were up and we stayed up until like 3:30
a.m. It’s a square room and some couches and TV – it’s not like maybe
he was there and we overlooked him. He wasn’t there," one of the frat
brothers says.
Detectives
searched his room, taking clothes and a computer; they even impounded
his car, a bright yellow Jeep Wrangler.
Back at
Albany Medical Center, Joan remained unconscious, clinging to life and
undergoing many hours of surgery.
Former
youth minister Joe Catalano rushed to Joan’s bedside to comfort
Christopher. He was struck by Christopher’s odd behavior. Asked if he
sensed any bit of grief with Chris, Catalano says, "None whatsoever."
By now,
Christopher was the prime suspect in the murder. But police had to
figure out how he could have done it.
Chris was
at the university the morning his parents were discovered, more than
200 miles from the crime scene. And while his fraternity brothers
hadn’t seen him the night before, another student did see him out
jogging the next morning. The case appeared to have hit a wall - until
investigators decided to check several campus security cameras. What
they saw changed everything.
Christopher
had told investigators he never left campus. But prosecutor Mike
McDermott says surveillance video shows Chris is lying. Caught on tape
was Chris' bright yellow Jeep driving through a campus parking lot
around 10:30 p.m., just hours before the attacks.
At 10:36
p.m., that same yellow Jeep was captured by a surveillance camera on
the roof of an off-campus medical center, headed east. From this
moment, prosecutors developed a theory for how they believe he
committed the crime.
At 10:45
p.m., New York State Thruway toll collector John Fallon thought he
remembered handing a ticket to a young man driving a yellow Jeep with
big tires. And at 1:51 a.m., another toll collector believes she may
have seen a yellow Jeep driven by a young white male speeding into her
lane at Exit 24 in Albany. The Porco home is just nine miles away from
the exit.
Prosecutor
David Rossi thinks Christopher got into the house by using a spare key
that was kept under a pot in front of the front door.
At
2:14 a.m., police believe Christopher deactivated the burglar alarm
using the master code. "Later he smashed the alarm keypad in an attempt
to hide that," Rossi says. "The information is stored on a box in the
basement, which we believe Chris probably didn’t know that. So smashing
the keypad did nothing."
Investigators
believe Chris then grabbed an ax from the garage, crept upstairs, and
savagely attacked his parents in bed.
At 4:54
a.m., phone company records show that the phone line was cut. "Before
he left, he staged the house so it appeared that an outsider was the
one who entered, cut the phone line," Rossi says.
At 5:12
a.m., Christopher re-enters the New York State Thruway, investigators
say, heading back towards Rochester. And finally, at 8:30 a.m. a yellow
Jeep is again captured by cameras on the roof of a medical center,
headed back in the direction of the campus.
To
McDermott, "It all fits perfectly." But how are prosecutors so certain
it’s Chris’ Jeep? McDermott acknowledges cameras didn't capture a
license plate or the driver.
But
investigators do have decals, and a telltale mud stain. "The same mud
stain. It’s better than a fingerprint," McDermott says.
On Nov. 4,
2005, Christopher was charged with the murder of his father, and
attempted murder of his mother.
Chris
admits that it was his Jeep on the surveillance video, but says he was
just moving it to park off-campus. By the time he returned to the dorm
lounge, he says his frat brothers had gone to sleep.
"The
surveillance cameras on campus don’t show me going to the Thruway they
don’t show me going home. They show me going off-campus," Christopher
says. "If I wanted to do something like this, if I wanted to sneak home
on the Thruway, why would I take a big yellow car? I mean, that makes
no sense to me."
"You’ve
got that surveillance video. But all that tells you is that he left
campus. It doesn’t tell you where he went," Van Sant tells McDermott.
But
McDermott says there was an eyewitness, Marshall Gokey, who saw the
Jeep in the Porcos' driveway at 4 a.m.
Gokey, a
neighbor, says he was driving past the Porco home on his way to work on
the day the bodies were discovered, when he spotted a familiar yellow
Jeep in the driveway. "I have no doubt in my mind whatsoever that was
Chris Porco’s Jeep," he says.
"You
couple Marshall Gokey with the surveillance videos with the toll takers
with the fact that the alarm was deactivated by someone who knew the
master codes, then Marshall Gokey just fits like the jewel on top of
the crown," McDermott says.
But a
stunning development would threatening to topple the prosecution’s
entire case and it involved their star witness: Joan Porco herself.
Joan, now
recovered from the attack but severely scarred, said she had no memory
of anything that happened that night, and no recollection of ever
indicating by nodding that her son was the attacker. And Joan went on
the offensive, publicly claiming that her son was innocent.
A month
after he was charged, Christopher was free again, out on bail posted by
a large circle of family and friends, all of whom are convinced of his
innocence. Until trial, he would be living with Elaine LaForte, a
veterinarian who Chris had worked with for years, and who says Chris is
like a son to her.
"I’m aware
of evidence that they did find at the crime scene that makes me believe
that it was not Christopher," says LaForte.
That
evidence is a lone fingerprint Chris’ attorney Laurie Shanks says was
found just inches from where the telephone wire was cut.
Shanks, a
professor at Albany law school and her law partner and husband Terry
Kindlon say the police cooked up a flimsy circumstantial case against
Chris.
"What
links Christopher to this crime is the malignant imagination of the
police department which decided within the first, we think, five
minutes that Christopher was the person who killed his father and
attacked his mother," says Kindlon.
But he
says that rush to judgment is based on their misguided belief that Joan
knew what she was doing when police say she identified her son as the
killer with a nod.
But
McDermott doesn't think Joan's movements were made by a woman in shock.
"I think she was able to meaningfully communicate," he says.
"It is
certainly quite possible that she would be able to follow simple
commands. But being able to follow a simple instruction doesn’t require
memory," says Dr. Mary Dombovy, one of the most respected neurologists
in Rochester. She has been treating Joan and would be testifying for
the defense at trial.
"You’re
saying Joan could have followed commands, raise your arm, and she’d
raise her arm. But if they’re asking questions of memory, that’s a
different part of the brain?" Van Sant asks.
"Very
different function," she says. "And that is universally what is
disrupted after a traumatic brain injury. She could simply have been
responding to the name Christopher."
The
defense believes prosecutors are relying on Joan’s nod because there’s
a major flaw in their case – not a shred of forensic evidence links
Chris to the crime.
Kindlon
says there was no bloody foot or fingerprint that linked Chris to the
crime scene and that no forensics evidence was found on his Jeep.
As far as
the surveillance video is concerned, Kindlon says, "We don’t think it’s
a problem at all. The fact is that Christopher’s Jeep was parked off
campus."
After
parking his car, Shanks and Kindlon say Chris wandered around until
sometime after 3:30 a.m. when he returned to the dorm lounge and fell
asleep
Kindlon
says he knows why the Porcos alarm was disabled using the master code:
"Peter Porco had the habit of shutting down the alarm to let the dog go
out and neglecting to put the alarm back."
And,
Shanks says, it was most likely Peter, barely conscious and bloodied,
who put the key in the front door. "It may very well be that he
believed that he was locked out and used that key to get back in his
disoriented state," she says.
And as for
neighbor Gokey’s Jeep sighting," Klindon says it might be a case of
false memory. "We think he was desperately trying to help the police.
There were two yellow Jeeps that normally parked and traveled through
the neighborhood."
The real
killer, Chris' lawyers say, may be the person who left a fingerprint on
a telephone box in the backyard just inches from where the phone line
was cut.
What’s
more, just weeks before the attack, Chris’ attorneys say Joan Porco saw
a stranger in her driveway. "Joan had told more than one person she was
very frightened. A stranger was there and ran when the light came on,"
Shanks says.
And Chris’
lawyers have another theory: they think the mob may have been targeting
the Porcos in retaliation for the alleged snitching by Peter’s distant
relative, Frankie “The Fireman” Porco, a convicted member of New York’s
mafia.
But
Prosecutors say they’ve checked out all these possibilities and none of
them lead anywhere. "There was a slow painstaking, methodical
investigation to reveal every scintilla of proof that he committed this
crime before he was charged," says McDermott.
And they
dispute the defense notion that Christopher was a sweet innocent young
man. Police discovered it was Chris who stole his parents' laptops, and
later sold them on eBay.
"Christopher
Porco has shown one face to his friends and family and has shown
another face that we’ve uncovered during the course of this
investigation," says McDermott.
Chris even
deceived his fraternity brothers, inventing a phony life as a rich kid.
"He said
his grandmother was a wealthy landowner, owned much of the land in
Fairfield County, Connecticut," one frat brother said.
But in
reality, prosecutors say, Chris was flunking out of school and deeply
in debt. His extravagant lifestyle was pure fantasy. And in the days
leading up to attack, Chris’ father discovered that his son had forged
his signature to obtain a car loan and a $31,000 loan to pay for
school. Peter Porco sent Chris a series of angry e-mails, calling his
son “out of control.”
And Joan
wrote Chris, “Your father and I are extremely upset with your lies….
Dad is about to have a nervous breakdown.”
Prosecutors
say Chris was broke and desperate. That’s when, they say, he hatched a
plan that would solve all his problems. "They’re only worth $60,000
alive. Dead, they’re worth $1.1 million," McDermott says.
But
Christopher calls the money motive "absurd." "I could never trade money
for my parents' lives," he tells Van Sant.
And Chris’
attorneys say they have proof that the relationship between Chris and
his parents was on the mend. "The very last e-mail he sends his son
says 'I’ve paid for your school for the fall. And we’ll talk about the
spring when you come home for Thanksgiving,'" says Shanks.
Nineteen
months after the savage attack that left her husband dead and her life
forever disfigured, Joan Porco walked side by side into court with the
man accused of the brutal crime – her own son.
For seven
weeks, the prosecution and defense battled over the bloody details of
this circumstantial case. More than 80 witnesses took the stand.
Paramedics
Kevin Robert and Dennis Wood testified that they saw Joan Porco nod
when asked if Chris was her attacker. But Joan’s neurologist Dr. Mary
Dumbovey told jurors it was unlikely, given Joan’s severe injuries,
that she understood what she was being asked.
Prosecutors
attacked Chris’s alibi, calling nine of his frat brothers to the stand.
“We
marched in everybody who was in that lounge that night and they all
said, Porco wasn’t here," Rossi testified.
Prosecutors
told the jury that’s because Christopher was on his way to commit
murder. Their key piece of evidence is that surveillance video. But
defense attorneys told jurors the tape merely showed Chris leaving
campus, not driving to his parents' house.
"There’s
no question he left at 10:30. He wasn’t allowed to park on campus,"
Shanks says. "But it doesn’t prove anything about where he was between
10:30 when he had to leave campus and the next morning when he parked
legally."
But jurors
heard from the two toll collectors who remembered seeing a yellow Jeep
like Chris’ on the night of the murder. And neighbor Marshall Gokey
told his story that he saw Chris’ Jeep on the morning of the attack.
Meanwhile,
the defense called into question the prosecution’s entire case,
suggesting it was the real killer who left that unidentified
fingerprint on the telephone box. And forensic pathologists reminded
the jury that not one drop of blood from the crime scene was found on
Christopher.
But
prosecutors have an answer for that. "First of all, we don’t believe he
got a lot of blood on him when he committed the crime," says Rossi.
"Number two, Christopher had plenty of time in the house to change his
clothes," McDermott points out. "And number three, Christopher works in
a veterinary hospital. He’s been trained how to avoid contamination."
Defense
attorney Shanks disagrees. "It defies common sense. If you hit someone
15 or 20 times with an ax, and you’re pulling back, and you hit
somebody and you hit somebody and you hit somebody. You’re going to
have blood on you. And the reason Christopher didn’t have blood on him
is because he didn’t do it."
Jurors,
who also heard from Chris' brother Jonathan, also would hear testimony
from Joan Porco, who hoped to convince jurors that her nod meant
nothing.
With grace
and determination, displaying the scars of her attack, Joan told the
jurors she had no memory of that night. But she was certain of one
thing: her son Christopher did not commit this terrible crime.
"Joan told
the jury that her son was a kind, loving compassionate person who
reminded her of her husband Peter," says Shanks.
Joan Porco
has never spoken in public about the case and turned down 48 Hours'
numerous requests for an interview. But during a break in the trial,
she did allow 48 Hours to film Christopher’s 23rd birthday party.
Asked how
he feels the trial is going, Christopher tells Van Sant, "As far as
guilt or innocence, I’m very optimistic about how things are going and
how they will go."
As his
attorneys prepared for closing statements, Chris who chose not to take
the stand, wanted to send a message to the jury. "To not jump to
conclusions. And to look at everything," he says. "If you look at the
whole picture it’s pretty clear that things just don’t add up."
In closing
arguments, which the judge allowed 48 Hours to videotape, Shanks
attacked the entire police investigation which began, she said, with a
false premise. She asked jurors to remember that not a shred of
forensic evidence linked Chris to the crime.
Besides
the Joan Porco's nod, prosecutor McDermott said there was more than
enough circumstantial evidence to find Chris guilty. “Using the master
code to disarm the alarm when he went to his parent’s house that
morning, ladies and gentlemen, was like dropping his wallet at the
crime scene.”
After a
seven-week trial, both sides in this murder case expected the jury to
be out for a long time; but it took jurors less than six hours to
render a unanimous verdict: guilty.
When the
verdict was read, Christopher was emotionless. Asked why, he says,
"Well, definitely it was, you know, the shock of it, of course. But
also Laurie told me that whatever the outcome, I should just not really
show much emotion. "
The
verdict came so suddenly, Joan wasn’t there in time to hear her son’s
fate.
"Christopher’s
first words to me when we sat down was, 'Will you please be the one to
tell my mother,' and he was very upset. By the time we got back to the
hotel, someone had already called her and so I was with her within
minutes and she hugged me and was just devastated," Shanks says.
Ultimately,
jurors say, the prosecution’s timeline proved devastating for
Christopher and his alibi just wasn’t convincing.
But
remarkably, the one thing jurors want Joan Porco to know is that her
nod played absolutely no role in their verdict. "We believe that she
didn’t know what she was nodding to. That she had no idea what the
question was. We threw that out. We dismissed that completely,” one
juror explained.
“You know,
it’s one thing for a juror to say that on TV, but it’s another thing
for them to actually believe that," Chris says. "It would not have been
possible for me to do this with the lack of evidence there was. It’s
just not possible."
"Do you
still say today that the real killer is out there somewhere?" Van Sant
asks.
"There’s
no doubt in my mind," he replies. "I know they’re out there. At this
point I have little confidence that they’ll ever be caught."
"Chris, he
thinks he’s smarter than everybody else. He thought he was smarter than
everybody else that night. He thought he committed the perfect crime.
He didn’t," says prosecutor David Rossi. "While Mrs. Porco may not
think so, and while the verdict brought more tragedy to her life,
justice was absolutely served by a guilty verdict."
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