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MITIGATING CIRCUMSTANCES: Jurors spare killer of retarded woman

Cornelius Rogers gets life without parole

A jury on Saturday spared the life of a man convicted of killing a 33-year-old retarded woman during a 2001 burglary in Henderson.

While spared the death penalty, 42-year-old Cornelius Rogers will spend the rest of his life behind bars without the chance of parole. He has already spent at least 20 years in prison or jail for various offenses, including sexual assault and pistol-whipping a woman.


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  • "We had our fingers crossed for mercy," said public defender Jeff Banks after the verdict was read.

    The jury convicted Rogers on Dec. 21 of first-degree murder in the killing of Julie Holt, who was found dead in the family's Henderson residence on March 13, 2001. Holt was hog-tied and had a sock stuffed in her mouth.

    A medical examiner ruled that she had suffocated.

    Rogers didn't testify during the trial, but on Friday he spoke briefly in open court to Holt's family. "I'm sorry for what Mrs. (Kathy) Holt is going through," he said.

    Kathy Holt, Julie Holt's mother, attended the sentencing hearing but declined to comment. She had previously said that she wanted Rogers to receive the harshest punishment.

    Although prosecutors were pushing for the death penalty, Deputy District Attorney Tracey Brierly said she saw the sentence as a victory.

    "The goal of the state was to protect the community by never having Cornelius Rogers be out again. We met that goal," she said. "Justice was served for the community and the Holt family today."

    Saturday's sentencing hearing brought an end to Rogers' six-week-long trial. Rogers, dressed in a suit, was led from the courtroom in handcuffs.

    The jury considered mitigating circumstances in sparing Rogers' life, including a rough upbringing.

    During a two-day sentencing hearing, Rogers' attorneys and others told the jury that he grew up in poverty with an abusive father who was in and out of Rogers' life and a mother who was ill-equipped to care for him and his five sisters.

    Rogers spent time in foster care and at the age of 15 was shot in a drive-by shooting in California. The shotgun blast took out one of Rogers' eyes and he dubbed himself "Popeye."

    Public defender Scott Coffee, who also represented Rogers, said the jury must have been swayed from the death penalty by learning of Rogers' difficult childhood.

    "They considered the struggles and horrors of the defendant's childhood in reaching this decision. I know it's not a decision they made lightly," he said.

    On Sept. 21, 1985, Rogers robbed and raped a woman who sold candy out of her home in California, authorities said. Eight days later, he robbed a woman in her 60s. He was about to sexually assault the 60-year-old woman before she told Rogers that she had cancer, authorities said.

    Rogers eventually served six years of about a 12-year sentence related to those crimes. Authorities in California paroled Rogers in 1992.

    Six months later, he pistol-whipped a female employee at an insurance company in Las Vegas. Police arrested Rogers and he was sentenced to about seven years in prison.

    Rogers was released in 2000 after completing his sentence. Four months later he burglarized and killed Julie Holt, authorities said.

    Contact reporter David Kihara at dkihara@reviewjournal.com or (702) 380-1039.

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    OhReally wrote on January 04, 2008 05:41 PM: Getting him off the street forever doesn't seem to be enough for you kind hearted folks....I guess uninvolved parties such as yourselves are rightly seeking your pound of flesh on society's behalf. No offense to lynch mob which seems to have gathered together in this forum, but at least get your facts straight: 1)the death penalty cost more than life in prison; 2) prison isn't such a fun place to reside and if you think it's a county club you've been going to wrong spa.


    Report abuse

    packe wrote on December 30, 2007 10:03 PM: True justice is at the end of a gun barrell..


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    Vicky wrote on December 30, 2007 12:54 PM: Obviously, prison didn't work for this waste of life the first time. Habitual criminals are just that...habitual. If he hadn't gotten out the two previous times he served time, this poor girl would be alive. Now, we are stuck paying for this waste of teeth and hair. Criminals have more rights than the victims and it's time to stop this madness. A dead man can't commit more crimes. I grew up in a crappy neighborhood, with gangs, criminals, an alcoholic father, an abusive environment and all the othe poor me, feel sorry for me stuff. I've made a better life for me and my family, so it's possible for anyone to do the same. It's a choice and he made his. Now, he doesn't have to pay for his crime in the manner it desrves. One of my family members was murdered by a repeat offender. I guess that means I'm really screwed up and can commit crimes because my life tragedies dictate that is what I should be doing. Someone please rid the world of this LOSER.


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    Oscar wrote on December 30, 2007 11:29 AM: As usual, the Legal System does not work. We need more Vigilantism. We need more Charles Bronsons to fight back and send a REAL message to creeps, that we're tired of being victims, and having no way to punish low-lifes for causing us pain, misery, and death without fear of Legal Reprisals. Elderly people are being robbed and killed for their valuables, children are being molested, our property is being taken from us, and the creeps do little time, and when they get out, they begin where they left off. They need to be executed, not incarcerated. How many good folks must suffer because the legal System is a sanctuary for criminals, embracing them, saving them from accountability. Only to find that the creeps have never been rehabilitated, they have spent their "Rest Time" planning the next big caper that will make them wealthy. Execute the garbage. Execute their Lawyers, and execute the liberal jurors that see Mitigating Circumstances as any reason to let a creep get away with MURDER.


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    Anne wrote on December 30, 2007 09:15 AM: Auslander....Auslander.....Does anyone smell ACLU?


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    Phillip wrote on December 30, 2007 09:13 AM: Asulander.....law B.S. Have you ever heard of the law being changed or amended???? Happens every day!


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    Chris wrote on December 30, 2007 08:58 AM: They should have "needled" this guy in the court room.


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    ms wrote on December 30, 2007 08:52 AM: I thought we had to cut 4.5% of state cost let us fire up that gas chamber and get rid of 4.5% of these animals


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    Auslander wrote on December 30, 2007 08:41 AM: Herman:

    Even if they were so inclined (which doesn't seem likely) the board can't commute a life without parole sentence to let this guy out. Prohibited by law.

    He'll spend the rest of his life in the place that made him what he is: prison.


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    dsm wrote on December 30, 2007 08:37 AM: We heard from the jurors who have no back bone and we heard from the victims mother and the Killers family can we now hear from the victim julie Holt who had a tougher childhood than this killer, what does she have to say about this verdict, why wasn't she in court to tell the jurors what happened.
    Oh thats right SHE IS DEAD. Where are the rights for the victims.


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