Guzek defense team files appeal brief for death sentence
Published 5:00 pm Wednesday, March 26, 2014
New documents submitted to the Oregon Supreme Court outline why Randy Lee Guzek’s fourth death sentence should be overturned and retried. The 890 page defense brief was submitted March 20th, four years after Guzek was sentenced to death for the murders of Rod and Lois Houser at their Terrebonne home in 1987. The prosecutor on three of the re-trials, Joshua Marquis, said he hopped in the 25 years of litigation this case would avoid any possibility of appeal. The document obtained by NewsChannel 21 says “Mr. Guzek was forced to wear a stundbelt…” It later says “Mr. Guzek repeatedly noted the impact of the stundbelt on his ability to concentrate, to assist his attorneys and it’s affect on his demeanor. Further on the defense writes, “Mr. Guzek claimed an alibi…”,”He was at home when the murders happened.” The alibi defense was used in the original trial in 1988, but using it in later trials became a point of contention making it all the way to the U.S. Supreme Court. The court ruled in 2006 in Oregon, Petitioner v. Randy Lee Guzek that the defense could not be used for retrial. “That’s interesting they would say that,” Marquis said. “Unless the Oregon Supreme Court is prepared to overturn the United States Supreme court I don’t think that’s going to be an issue.” The brief also states, Guzek is a “model prisoner” saying “prison officials expect he would come to their aid if violence was threatened.” “The defense lawyers job is basically to throw as much spaghetti at the wall as humanly possible,” Marquis said, “merely because an allegation is made in a document does not mean it is necessarily true.” Marquis added, the case is now in the hands of the Oregon Supreme Court, who must figure it all out. It could take several more years before a decision is made on a re-trial. Before that can happen the state attorney general’s office must file a response within six months.
“48 citizens in Deschutes County have sentenced Mr. Guzek to death,” Marquis said. “Millions of dollars have been spent by tax payers providing him excellent representation.”
As of 2010, the case had cost $2.3 million.
“My main thoughts go out to the Houser family who have endured this ordeal for 25 years,” Marquis said, “It’s my hope that that ordeal is over or soon will be.”