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Melissa
R. BATES
Classification: Murderer
Characteristics: The
body was burned along with tires, wood and hay, ringed by rocks
and cinder blocks
Number of victims: 1
Date of murder: May 15, 2011
Date of arrest:
2 days after
Date of birth: 1984
Victim profile: Her uncle, Robert Dean Marek, 43
Method of murder:
Shooting
Location: St. Maries, Benewah County, Idaho, USA
Status:
Sentenced to 30 years to life in prison on May 25, 2012
Woman sentenced for murder
Bates entered Alford plea to second-degree
murder charge
By David Cole - Cdapress.com
Friday, May 25, 2012
ST. MARIES - A 28-year-old woman who brutally
killed her uncle and burned his body in May of last year near St.
Maries will spend at least the next three decades locked up.
Melisa R. Bates appeared on Thursday in a St.
Maries courtroom and received what's called an indeterminate life
sentence, meaning she might spend the rest of her life in custody.
First District Court Judge Fred Gibler,
however, set the fixed portion of her sentence at 30 years.
Last month, following court-ordered mediation,
she agreed to be sentenced for murdering Robert D. Marek, 43. She
entered an Alford plea to the charge of second-degree murder.
The murder was committed May 15, 2011, at
Marek's home about 8 miles south of St. Maries along Highway 3.
Gibler said Bates suffers from "severe" mental
illness, but that's not a defense in Idaho, but more of a
mitigating factor to consider at sentencing.
Gibler cited a recent mental-health evaluation
of her, which "strongly recommended" that Bates be locked up at a
secure facility because she poses a significant risk to the
community.
Bates' defense attorney, Will Butler, said she
grew up in St. Maries, and was a good student and athlete in
school.
Mental illness started showing up in her early
teens, he said.
"There are 10 different diagnoses for what
Melisa is," he said.
"Probably the best definition is that Melisa is
mentally ill."
Bates got married at 17 and then later
divorced. She has a son and daughter.
Butler said Bates can be rehabilitated with the
proper medication and therapy.
He asked the court to settle on a sentence that
will bring healing to Bates and her family.
Bates was given a chance to address the court,
but her scattered statements were without logical or meaningful
connection to her crime or the sentencing hearing.
She ended with: "I do not. I repeat. I do not
want any more connection with my biological family."
One member of that family addressed the court.
Deann Turcott, Bates' aunt, said Bates went
through dramatic changes emotionally and mentally in her early
teens.
"She just started to disconnect with the world
and reality," Turcott said.
She said Bates falsely believed that people
were always abusing her.
At her best, she said Bates was a hard worker,
a great athlete and good student, echoing Butler's descriptions.
After spending nearly two years in a
psychiatric hospital in Orofino, Bates showed improvement, Turcott
said.
But then Bates stopped taking her medication
and got off track again.
"Something inside her snapped a long time ago,"
Turcott said.
The state of Idaho's mental-health system
failed Bates and her family, Turcott said.
She's afraid for Bates in prison, because of
her condition.
"Let us know she is safe," she told Gibler.
As for Marek, she said, "He was a sweet man and
didn't deserve to die like that. He loved (Bates)."
Benewah County Prosecutor Doug Payne said the
case lacked any real motive.
When Bates was having a tough time, and needed
a place to live, Marek took her in. She killed him soon afterward.
Bates demonstrated a mixture of rational and
irrational thoughts, Payne said.
During Bates' preliminary hearing, evidence
presented by Payne alleged that Bates shot her uncle, beat him
with a metal rod and then burned his body in the backyard of his
home.
Human remains, mostly bone, were found in a
hastily arranged makeshift fire pit in the middle of Marek's lawn.
His body was burned along with tires, wood and
hay, ringed by rocks and cinder blocks.
Dumped in a trash can at Marek's home,
investigators found a wedding dress, a graduation certificate from
a life-skills program she completed, a court judgment document
from a domestic violence case she was a defendant in, and a Social
Security document for her.
Bates was arrested at a boat launch in Bayview
on Lake Pend Oreille as she prepared to head across the lake to
Lakeview, a community she previously had been living in.
In a video-recorded interview with police,
Bates admitted shooting Marek and burning his body. She also
admitted throwing the gun into the St. Joe River.
Also during the preliminary hearing, two
witnesses testified that they saw Bates at Marek's home on the
night he was killed.
She told both men, who had stopped by, that she
was having problems with the plumbing at Marek's home. Both
noticed the backyard fire blazing, despite the pouring rain.
One of the witnesses said Bates kept saying the
water flowing at Marek's was "blood red."
Thinking it was an odd description, he
attempted to correct her by suggesting she meant "rusty." She
persisted in her description.
As for Marek's whereabouts, he said Bates told
him Marek is "out back someplace."
Bates let the man inside Marek's home to see if
he could help with the plumbing. He even went out back to the pump
house, right next to the roaring fire pit where Marek's body was
then burning.
Butler, during Thursday's sentencing hearing,
argued that no person in their right mind would walk a potential
witness right past a murdered victim's burning body.
Another friend of Marek's who testified at the
preliminary hearing recalled an argument between Marek and Bates
over the sale of property.
After Marek told Bates to mind her own
business, she allegedly stood up and responded, "I can shoot you
right between the (expletive) eyes, and it won't bother me a bit."
Melisa Bates enters Alford plea in murder of her uncle
KREM.com
April 4, 2012
SAINT MARIES, Idaho-- Melisa Bates entered an
Alford plea on Wednesday, meaning she doesn't admit to her crime,
but admits there is enough evidence against her that a jury would
most likely find her guilty.
Prosecutors in Benewah County have agreed to a
plea agreement with Bates.
Bates is accused of killing her uncle, Robert
Marek, last spring in Saint Maries.
She was expected to change her plea to guilty
in court Wednesday.
Charges against her will be dropped from first
degree murder to second degree murder.
Investigators say Bates shot Marek, beat him
with a metal rod, and then tried to burn his body.
Sheriff: Homicide victim was 'unrecognizable'
Ktvb.com
May 18, 2011
ST. MARIES, Idaho Authorities confirmed the
identity of a man shot and killed at a home near St. Maries,
Idaho.
Authorities said Wednesday they believe Bobby
Marek was killed sometime Sunday by 26-year-old suspect Melissa
Bates.
Benewah County Prosecutor Doug Payne said
deputies arrested Bates on murder charges Tuesday in the town of
Bayview, about a two hour drive north of St. Maries. She is set to
appear in court Wednesday in St. Maries. She is the only suspect
in the case.
The case started as a missing person report
from Stimson Mill when the Marek didn t show up for a swing shift
on Monday.
Payne and the Benewah County Sheriff s Office
said the murder left the victim unrecognizable.
According to Payne the incident started as an
argument. Deputies searched the victim's property near mile marker
76 on Highway 3 outside of St. Maries.
A KREM 2 News reporter on the scene said it
appeared as if investigators were focusing their search for
evidence on an outbuilding on the property.
Victim identified in St. Maries murder
By Cole Heath and KREM.com
May 17, 2011
NEAR ST. MARIES, Idaho – Authorities confirmed
the identity of a man shot and killed at a home near St. Maries,
Idaho.
Authorities said Wednesday they believe Bobby
Marek was killed sometime Sunday by 26-year-old suspect Melissa
Bates.
Benewah County Prosecutor Doug Payne said
deputies arrested Bates on murder charges Tuesday in the town of
Bayview, about a two hour drive north of St. Maries. She is set to
appear in court Wednesday in St. Maries. She is the only suspect
in the case.
The case started as a missing person report
from Stimson Mill when the Marek didn’t show up for a swing shift
on Monday.
Payne and the Benewah County Sheriff’s Office
said the murder left the victim "unrecognizable."
According to Payne the incident started as an
argument. Deputies searched the victim's property near mile marker
76 on Highway 3 outside of St. Maries.
A KREM 2 News reporter on the scene said it
appeared as if investigators were focusing their search for
evidence on an outbuilding on the property.
Melissa R. Bates
Melissa R. Bates looks toward family and friends prior to
being sentenced for
second degree murder in a Benewah County
courthouse.
(Shawn Gust/CdaPress.com)