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Would you convict Susan Lorincz? Here’s what the jury is being told
By Nick Papantonis,
2024-08-16
Jurors are expected to begin deliberations as soon as lunchtime Friday in the manslaughter trial against Susan Lorincz, who shot and killed her neighbor through a locked door last summer.
Lorincz is facing 30 years in prison if she is convicted but maintains her position that she believed her life was threatened as Owens pounded on her front door, and the shooting should fall under Florida’s Stand Your Ground law. She opted not to testify in her own defense, though that did not come as a surprise to court observers.
Many of the details about the shooting and the victim, Ajike Owens, were made public long before witnesses were sworn in. However, not all of those details were allowed to enter the courtroom.
Here’s what facts have been highlighted over the three days of testimony – and what the jury will likely prioritize as it weighs its decision.
The jury is made up of four men and two women, all white . Two women are serving as alternates, but they haven’t been needed so far. Most of the jury appears to be older than 40.
At least two of the jurors are gun owners, which could influence their opinions on some of the testimony. Three jurors have ties to law enforcement.
The charge and Stand Your Ground law
Under Florida law, “manslaughter” happens when a person kills another human being, and the killing was inexcusable or unjustified.
Florida’s Stand Your Ground law provides a shield from criminal prosecution when the killer “reasonably” believes the other person is about to harm or kill them or commit a crime that involves violence like arson or robbery.
Lorincz’s charge is upgraded because she used a gun. Her involvement in the shooting is not in question. The trial centers on whether her claim that she was afraid for her life was reasonable.
In their efforts to put Lorincz in prison, prosecutors have built a complex web around her claims and attempted to cut off her arguments piece by piece rather than create a coherent narrative for jurors to follow.
A summary of the claims and discoveries detectives made:
Lorincz filmed the neighborhood kids playing near her home repeatedly for hours before the shooting
Lorincz swung an umbrella at some of the kids
Lorincz threw a roller skate at or near one child
Owens went to Lorincz’s house to confront her after being told about the skate and that Lorincz stole one child’s tablet
Owens never verbally threatened Lorincz’s life
Owens did not continuously pound on Lorincz’s front door
Deputies were already on the way to the situation after Lorincz called 911 to report the kids for trespassing and were just minutes from arriving
Owens did not attempt to enter Lorincz’s home and, in fact, was asking her to come outside
Lorincz walked around her home for several minutes as Owens stood outside
Lorincz’s door had a brand-new deadbolt lock with three-inch screws, making it difficult to kick in
Owens did not bang on the door hard enough to damage it
Lorincz threw her gun back into the bedroom trash can where she kept it, but it somehow fell underneath a different gun she owned
Lorincz bought that gun because of Owens and practiced shooting with some regularity
Lorincz – despite a hysterical second 911 call after the shooting – was calm and unemotional as deputies detained her a few minutes after that call, inquiring about her cats but not the woman she shot
Lorincz researched Florida’s Stand Your Ground law sometime around the shooting before she spoke to detectives
Additionally, prosecutors insinuated Lorincz walked up to her door before pulling the trigger and moved the shell casing from her shot onto the kitchen counter – a move the defense’s own witness called “highly unusual” as he attempted to downplay the possibility.
Prosecutors framed the shooting as a calculated move made by a frustrated Lorincz, who was seeking a quick way to end an ongoing dispute with her neighbor.
The jury was not allowed to hear any testimony about Lorincz using racial slurs against the kids, except for a recording of one of her interviews when detectives asked her about allegations neighbors made, and she denied them.
The defense comes into the final day of the trial with an advantage: they only need to convince one juror that Lorincz’s actions were reasonable instead of all six.
Their strategy has been centered on creating that sliver of doubt from the first moments they began arguing, with a dramatic opening statement involving pounding a fist on the podium and playing Lorincz’s 911 call where she cried to the point of being undecipherable.
Here are some of the other points they’ve made:
Owens was decades younger than Lorincz and more than 100 pounds heavier
Owens has had other altercations with Lorincz, including times when Lorincz said she was threatened
Owens once tossed a sign at Lorincz
Owens once followed Lorincz as she walked
Lorincz had been in a car crash and had various medical problems that lowered her mobility
Owens banged on Lorincz’s door hard enough to make the door and walls shake
Owens was blocking Lorincz’s only way out of her apartment
Owens was very angry and cursing
Lorincz said she believed Owens was going to beat her to death
Lorincz had no way of knowing if Owens was armed
Lorincz said she was aiming to scare Owens, not kill her
Lorincz’s shell casing was found on the kitchen counter, far from the door
Lorincz didn’t delete anything from her phone
Lorincz cooperated with deputies from the moment they arrived and willingly granted interviews with detectives
Owens had been warned to call law enforcement instead of confronting Lorincz herself
The defense was barred from most mentions of drug use and shootings the neighborhood had in the past. Detectives said they were called there frequently, but the judge ruled going into detail about the state of crime in the neighborhood would be prejudicial.
A defense expert also wasn’t allowed to testify about Lorincz’s state of mind as Owens banged on her door since he lacked the proper qualifications.
Ultimately, the defense is asking jurors to take Lorincz at her word that she was afraid of what Owens might do to her before deputies could arrive on the scene. That fear caused her to pull the trigger to prevent Owens from entering her apartment.
Other than one juror nodding her head as a defense expert testified, there have been no visible signs of agreement with either side’s arguments during the court of the trial so far, and it’s unclear how quickly the six men and women will come to a decision – if ever.
Closing statements are scheduled to begin at 9 a.m. Friday.
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