INTERNET SOURCE: http://www.kesq.com/news/news-headlines/survivor-of-serial-killer-fights-for-death-penalty/122986636
Survivor of
serial killer fights for death penalty
Jennifer
Asbenson urges voters to reject Prop. 62
By: Jeff Stahl
Posted: Oct 17, 2016 04:22 PM PDT
Updated: Oct 18, 2016 09:06 AM PDT
THOUSAND
PALMS, Calif. - The only known survivor of a serial killer, a man authorities
say murdered eight woman, is now worried voters might get rid of California's
Death Penalty law she hopes her would-be killer will someday face.
Jennifer
Asbenson is still is waiting for her would-be killer, Andrew Urdiales, to face
the justice she says he deserves, 24-years after her attack.
"On the
confession tapes, he said he stopped strangling me because his hands got
tired," Asbenson said. "He says my face turned blue, my eyes started
protruding. My eyes got bloodshot."
Asbenson thought she was going to die that September morning in Desert Hot Springs, 1992.
Asbenson thought she was going to die that September morning in Desert Hot Springs, 1992.
Asbenson
said, "Anybody who would get into his car, he would take them somewhere
and he would murder them."
She freed
herself and escaped Urdiales, later convicted of murdering three other women in
Illinois and Indiana in 1996.
A trial for
the murders of five more women here in Riverside, Orange and San Diego counties
between 1986 and 1995 is about to begin in Orange County in February of 2017.
Julie McGhee,
29, of Cathedral City was shot and killed in a remote area of Palm Springs in
July 1988.
Prosecutors
say Urdiales also shot Tammie Erwin, 18, in April 1989.
"I've
heard a lot of people say serial killers, or monsters like that, aren't afraid
of anything. They are! They are afraid to die," said
Asbenson.
She's using
Facebook to spread her message.
She's against
Proposition 62, which would end California's Death Penalty and replace it with
life imprisonment without possibility of parole.
"It's
justice. You're getting to know the person who did this is no longer on this
earth," said Asbenson. " They
can no longer hurt another human being and is gone because of what they did.
And that's what's right," Asbenson added.
Hundreds of
death sentences have been handed down in our state.
But since
1973, California has only carried out 13 executions, the last in 2006.
749 people
are currently on death row waiting to die.
19 states and
the District of Columbia have banned the punishment.
31 states still have the death penalty.
The National Coalition to Abolish the Death Penalty is among the critics who say some on death row have later been exonerated of their crimes. They want it to end.
Asbenson, Urdiales's only known survivor, says no. "There are definitely a lot of people out there who are pure evil and they do not deserve to live," Asbenson said.
She's
supporting Prop. 66, which would require more attorneys to represent those on
death row, speed up appeals and allow prisons to develop new execution methods.
She's been
defriended, and has unfriended others online, but she feels it's worth it.
Asbenson
said, "There's no reason for such evil to exist.
There's no reason."
Urdiales
escaped the death penalty in Illinois, when the state abolished it.
The Orange County D.A.'s office tells News Channel three a hearing on his California case was held last Wednesday.
His jury
trial has been delayed a number of times, but is currently set to start on
February 6th next year.
You can see those currently on
California's Condemned Inmate List at: http://www.cdcr.ca.gov/Capital_Punishment/docs/CondemnedInmateListSecure.pdf?pdf=Condemned-Inmates
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