Letecia Stauch makes her first appearance in El Paso County District Court in Colorado Springs, Colo., Wednesday, March 11, 2020. Stauch faces several charges, including first-degree murder of a child, in the presumed death of 11-year-old Gannon Stauch. (KRDO-TV/The Gazette via AP, Pool)
Al Stauch, right, father of Gannon Stauch, walks into the El Paso County courthouse in Colorado Springs, Colo. along with supporters and family members on Wednesday, April 5, 2023. Stauch was on the witness stand for the second day in the trial of Letecia Stauch, his ex-wife, who has been charged with the murder of his son. (Jerilee Bennett/The Gazette via AP)
FILE – In this March 11, 2020, file photo, Letecia Stauch appears in El Paso County District Court in Colorado Springs, Colo. A Colorado woman accused of killing her 11-year-old stepson pleaded not guilty Thursday, Nov. 4, 2021, to first-degree murder and a dozen other charges. Letecia Stauch was in court for the first time in months after opting to appear virtually for earlier hearings, The Colorado Springs Gazette reported. (KRDO-TV/The Gazette via AP, Pool, File)
Letecia Stauch makes her first appearance in El Paso County District Court in Colorado Springs, Colo., Wednesday, March 11, 2020. Stauch faces several charges, including first-degree murder of a child, in the presumed death of 11-year-old Gannon Stauch. (KRDO-TV/The Gazette via AP, Pool)
FILE – In this Feb. 13, 2020 file photo El Paso County Law enforcement and volunteers use poles to search snowy areas for 11-year-old missing Colorado Springs boy Gannon Stauch on private property in southern Douglas County near Larkspur Colo. Authorities plan to announce a “major development” on Monday, March 2, 2020 in the case of an 11-year-old Colorado boy missing for over a month. Gannon Stauch was reported missing Jan. 27, 2020 by his stepmother, Letecia Stauch, who said he left left to go to a friend’s house in the afternoon. (Chancey Bush/The Gazette via AP,File)
FILE – In this Feb. 2, 2020 file photo a box of tissues sits on the sidewalk full of messages and in front of a large sign to “Pray for Gannon” at the entrance for Lorson Ranch, near Colorado Springs, Colo. Authorities plan to announce a “major development” on Monday, March 2, 2020 in the case of an 11-year-old Colorado boy missing for over a month. Gannon Stauch was reported missing Jan. 27, 2020 by his stepmother, Letecia Stauch, who said he left left to go to a friend’s house in the afternoon. (Jerilee Bennett/The Gazette via AP,File)
FILE – In this Jan. 30, 2020 file photo Landon Hoitt, foreground, and Albert Stauch, background, parents of Gannon Stauch, make a tearful plea for the return of their son, during a news conference at the El Paso County Sheriff’s Office, in Colorado Springs, Colo. Authorities plan to announce a “major development” on Monday, March 2, in the case of Gannon Stauch, an 11-year-old Colorado boy missing for over a month. Gannon Stauch was reported missing Jan. 27, 2020 by his stepmother, Letecia Stauch, who said he left left to go to a friend’s house in the afternoon. (Jerilee Bennett/The Gazette via AP, File)
Accused murder suspect Letecia Stauch appears via CCTV feed before Myrtle Beach Municipal Court Judge Clifford Welsh Tuesday, March 3, 2020, at the Myrtle Beach Police Department in Myrtle Beach, S.C. Stauch is accused of murdering her stepson in Colorado and was arrested in South Carolina this week. (Josh Bell/The Sun News via AP)
This Thursday, March 5, 2020 booking photo provided by the El Paso County, Colo., Sheriff’s Office shows Letecia Stauch. Stauch, suspected of killing her missing stepson, was returned to Colorado to face charges after being arrested in South Carolina. She was arrested Monday, March 2, in Myrtle Beach, on a warrant for charges including first-degree murder of a child in the death of 11-year-old Gannon Stauch. (El Paso County Sheriff’s Office via AP)
Gannon Stauch
El Paso County Sheriff’s Deputy Zachary Margurite uses a shovel to search areas for 11-year-old missing Colorado Springs boy Gannon Stauch on private property along South Perry Park Road in southern Douglas County near Larkspur Colo., on Thursday, Feb. 13, 2020. The search area for Stauch who is missing for over two weeks has expanded to northern El Paso County as well as southern Douglas County. Over 130 people including members of search and rescue teams searched for Gannon with the help of dogs, the sheriff’s office said. (Chancey Bush/The Gazette via AP)
Landen Hiott, center, is comforted by her aunt, Veronica Birkenstock, and Albert Stauch after the announcement Monday, March 2, 2020 that Gannon Stauch’s stepmother, Letecia Stauch, was arrested and charged with first degree murder of Gannon. Albert Stauch and Landen Hiott are the parents of Gannon Stauch. The investigation into the disappearance of Gannon Stauch, 11, began on Jan. 27, 2020, when the stepmother called 9-1-1 to report him missing in a subdivision near Colorado Springs, Colorado. A shaken El Paso County Sheriff Bill Elder, left, had just made the announcement of the arrest. The body of Gannon Stauch has still not been found. (Jerilee Bennett/The Gazette via AP)
DENVER | Jurors found a Colorado Springs woman guilty of murder in the death of her 11-year-old stepson on Monday, rejecting her claim that she was insane when she attacked him.
Letecia Stauch was convicted of all charges she faced in Gannon Stauch’s killing over three years after prosecutors said she stabbed Gannon 18 times before hitting him in the head and then shooting him once. Prosecutors claimed Stauch killed the boy in January 2020 because she hated him and wanted to hurt his father, Al Stauch, whom she planned to leave and who was away on a National Guard deployment at the time.
Stauch did not deny killing Gannon and taking his body across the country in a suitcase in the back of a rented van. But she pleaded not guilty by reason of insanity. The defense argued that she killed Gannon during a “psychotic break” caused by trauma from being physically, emotionally and sexually abused during her childhood.
Experts at the state mental hospital concluded that Stauch had a personality disorder with borderline and narcissistic features but was sane at the time Gannon was killed. Under Colorado law, that means understanding the difference between right and wrong and being able to form the intent to commit a crime.
The main defense witness, Dr. Dorothy Lewis, author of the book “Crazy, Not Insane” and featured in an HBO documentary with the same title, concluded Stauch suffered from dissociative identity disorder — when someone has two or more personalities as the result of trauma — and was not sane at the time Gannon was killed.
Prosecutors, however, pointed out that Lewis did not know how sanity is defined under Colorado law.
In the weeks leading up to Gannon’s killing, Stauch was diagnosed with generalized anxiety disorder after she was referred to a psychologist while being treated military health clinic. Therapist Ronda Niederhauser testified that Stauch did not show any signs of being a threat to herself or others and was aware of her surroundings.
Authorities believe Stauch killed Gannon in his bedroom a few hours before reporting him missing on Jan. 27, 2020, saying he had not come home from playing with friends. Dozens of volunteers helped search for the boy in the area around where the family lived near Colorado Springs. However, investigators later revealed that Stauch concocted a variety of stories to mislead them, including that a man she hired to repair a carpet raped her and then abducted Gannon.
After Al Stauch became suspicious of his wife, he allowed the FBI to listen in on his phone calls with Stauch, trying to draw out more information from her about where Gannon was. Hours of audio from those calls along with video recordings of interviews with Stauch about her mental health were a prominent part of the evidence offered during the five-week trial.
Gannon’s remains were found by bridge inspectors in March 2020, in a suitcase under a bridge on the Florida Panhandle. Prosecutors suggested that Stauch snuck out from a hotel room where she was staying with her daughter in Pensacola to dispose of his body in the middle of the night, hoping it would be swept into the Gulf of Mexico.
Stauch was convicted of first-degree murder after deliberation, first-degree murder of a child by a person in a position of trust, tampering with a deceased human body and tampering with physical evidence.
She did not appear to show any reaction to the verdict as it was read, sitting at the defense table between her two lawyers. Later, as everyone milled around court talking, she sat there alone, taking sips of water.
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Child killershould bexecuted.
Now she gets better medical care than many of us, all paid for by us.
Child killershould bexecuted.
Now she gets better medical care than many of us, all paid for by us.