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Christine
COFFMAN
Classification: Murderer
Characteristics:
Revenge
(Christine Coffman was trying to get back at her own husband - by
killing the step-grandson he loved - because he wanted a divorce)
Location: Milwaukee,
Clackamas County, Oregon,
USA
Status:
Pleaded guilty. Sentenced to life in prison on March 12, 2007
Milwaukie woman sentenced to
life for killing 4-year-old boy
By Noelle Crombie - The Oregonian
Monday, March 12, 2007
A 45-year-old Milwaukie woman will spend the
rest of her life in prison for bludgeoning her 4-year-old
stepgrandson to death.
In a hearing that lasted only six minutes, a
somber Clackamas Circuit Judge Robert Herndon sentenced Christine
Coffman to life in prison for the murder of Matal Sanchez in June
2005.
Coffman confessed to the boy's murder three
days after his death. She said she first tried to strangle him,
then she struck him in the head with a rock. Coffman eventually
led authorities to a densely forest plot of land near Estacada,
where the boy's lifeless body confirmed her story.
Greg Horner, chief deputy district attorney,
said his office consulted with Matal's family members before
reaching the plea deal with Coffman. He said the resolution had
the unanimous support of the boy's family, including his mother
and stepfather.
After the hearing, Horner explained Coffman's
motive, saying she and her husband Duffy Coffman were having
marriage problems and were on the verge of divorcing. Christine
Coffman killed Matal to hurt her husband since he was close with
the boy.
"It's been very clear what her motive was,"
Horner said. "She was interested in getting back at him and
causing pain to her husband."
Matal's family members declined to address the
court this morning. Prosecutor Shannon Kmetic read a brief
statement written by Matal's grandmother, Brenda Kayser, who told
the court the boy was "her world." Kayser wept quietly as Kmetic
read the statement.
"And although my world has crumbled all around
me, I will always love my little angel," she told the court. "He
will never be forgotten. His love keeps me alive."
"I will never get to do all the things a
grandma and grandson get to do. I will never get to hear him say,
'I love your heart, Grandma,' as he always told me."
Coffman, shackled and wearing the
black-and-white striped jailhouse uniform reserved for the most
violent offenders, said nothing during the proceeding.
Herndon said the family's suffering is
"inconceivable."
"At this point in my legal career, I have lost
track of how many of these cases I have been involved with," he
said. "I will go to my own grave probably always thinking of your
grandson.
"I am glad you have accepted responsibility for
what you did," he said.
The boy's disappearance in June 2005 prompted
enormous media attention and an extensive search involving local
police, FBI agents, detectives from the Oregon State Police, the
Clackamas County Interagency Crime Team, search and rescue teams
and a helicopter from the Oregon Army National Guard.
After Coffman was arrested, darker details
about Matal's life surfaced. A Seattle-area woman named Susi
Strom, who took care of the boy for weeks at a time when he was
about 4 to 8 months old, said she filed two reports alleging the
boy was poorly cared for with Oregon's child protective
authorities in 2001.
It's unclear when Coffman became a part of
Matal's life. Laura married Daniel Acevedo in November 2003, and
nothing in court records explains how Coffman could have simply
driven away with the boy one summer day and ended his life.
"I just got out of the bathroom, and the house
was empty, and I noticed that (Coffman's) car was gone, so I knew
she went to go run some errands," Laura Acevedo told a police
dispatcher after she first realized her son was missing in 2005.
"I thought maybe she took him with her, but both the car seats are
here. I know she wouldn't take him without the car seat."
Woman gets life sentence for
murdering child
Katu.com
March 12, 2007
OREGON CITY, Ore. - A woman who confessed to
killing 4-year-old Matal Sanchez was sentenced Monday to life in
prison.
Christine Coffman, 45, who was the boy's
step-grandmother, had been expected to use an insanity defense at
a trial scheduled for next month but instead pleaded guilty to
murder last week.
If the Milwaukie woman's case had gone before a
jury, she could have faced the death penalty.
Outside the courtroom Monday, prosecutors said
they believe the motive in the killing was revenge. Christine
Coffman was trying to get back at her own husband - by killing the
step-grandson he loved - because he wanted a divorce, said Greg
Horner, chief deputy district attorney.
"She was interested in getting back at her
husband and had done this to cause pain to her husband," Horner
said.
The Milwaukie boy vanished June 29, 2005,
triggering a frantic, multi-day search that gained national
attention. But police quickly focused on Coffman, and she
acknowledged killing the boy by hitting him in the head with a
rock.
At the time, Coffman offered no motive for her
actions but led police to the boy's lifeless body in the wooded
foothills of the Cascades.
Matal's parents are Laura and Daniel Acevedo.
Daniel Acevedo is Coffman's son. It's unclear when Coffman became
a part of Matal's life.
"I just got out of the bathroom, and the house
was empty, and I noticed that (Coffman's) car was gone, so I knew
she went to go run some errands," Laura Acevedo told a police
dispatcher after she first realized her son was missing in 2005.
"I thought maybe she took him with her, but both the car seats are
here. I know she wouldn't take him without the car seat."
Coffman initially told police she was away
picking blackberries, donating blood and running errands. But
blackberries weren't ripe on the route she described.
Investigators also learned that she had purchased raspberries from
a store, and a forensic scientist said red stains on her shirt
appeared to be berries smeared over blood.
On Monday, the boy's parents left the courtroom
without speaking. They were followed by the boy's other
grandmother, Brenda Kayser, who was too upset to speak.
But in a letter written by Kayser and read by
prosecutors during the court hearing, Kayser said she will never
forget Matal.
"You had no right taking my angel from my life
so today I come here in honor of Matal to see justice being done
for the crime that Chris committed on my grandson that took his
sweet, loving young life from us all...
"Matal was my world, my grandson, and although
my world has crumbled all around me, I will always love my little
angel, he will never be forgotten."
Prosecutors said the family was unanimous in
wanting Coffman to receive a life sentence rather than the death
penalty.
Woman pleads guilty to murdering
step-grandson
Katu.com
March 5, 2007
OREGON CITY, Ore. (AP) - A woman who confessed
to killing 4-year-old Matal Sanchez in the summer of 2005 has
pleaded guilty to murder.
Christine Coffman, 45, who was the boy's
stepgrandmother, had been expected to use an insanity defense at a
trial scheduled for next month.
If a Clackamas County judge approves the plea
agreement, Coffman will be sentenced to life in prison. If her
case had gone before a jury, Coffman could have faced the death
penalty.
The Milwaukie boy vanished June 29, 2005,
triggering a frantic, multi-day search that gained national
attention. But police quickly focused on Coffman, and she
acknowledged killing the boy by hitting him in the head with a
rock.
Coffman offered no motive for her actions but
led police to the boy's lifeless body in the wooded foothills of
the Cascades.
A psychologist testified that Coffman was
mentally competent to enter a guilty plea, Greg Horner, deputy
district attorney, said Monday.
Matal's parents are Laura and Daniel Acevedo.
Daniel Acevedo is Coffman's son. It's unclear when Coffman became
a part of Matal's life.
"I just got out of the bathroom, and the house
was empty, and I noticed that (Coffman's) car was gone, so I knew
she went to go run some errands," Laura Acevedo told a police
dispatcher after she first realized her son was missing in 2005.
"I thought maybe she took him with her, but both the car seats are
here. I know she wouldn't take him without the car seat."
Coffman initially told police she was away
picking blackberries, donating blood and running errands. But
blackberries weren't ripe on the route she described.
Investigators also learned that she had purchased raspberries from
a store, and a forensic scientist said red stains on her shirt
appeared to be berries smeared over blood.
Murder indictment in Oregon
child's death
By Rukmini Callimachi - The Associated Press
July 13, 2005
OREGON CITY, Ore. — A 43-year-old woman accused
of killing her 4-year-old step-grandson and leaving his body in
the woods was indicted on a charge of aggravated murder yesterday
by a Clackamas County grand jury.
Christine Coffman, who appeared via
closed-circuit TV, did not enter a plea during a brief court
appearance. She was being held without bail at the Clackamas
County jail, where she has been on suicide watch since her arrest
more than a week ago.
Coffman led police to the body of Matal Sanchez
off a heavily wooded stretch of road about 25 miles from the boy's
suburban home in Milwaukie. The child was reported missing by his
mother last Wednesday.
The step-grandmother had left the house that
day, and police initially assumed the child was with her.
Investigators began to question Coffman upon
her return three hours later, when she arrived at the house
without him, her T-shirt stained with a red-colored substance.
Neighbors and family members searched for the
boy, before Coffman led police to his body Saturday. An autopsy
indicated the boy died of one or more blows to the head.
No other details about the death have been
released.
Greg Horner, Clackamas County chief deputy
district attorney, declined to give any other information after
yesterday's hearing.
Jenny Cooke, the attorney for Coffman, said her
client was suffering emotionally.
"My client has been on suicide watch — I think
that says everything you need to know about her mental state," she
told reporters outside the courtroom.
The child's mother, Laura Acevedo, and her
husband, Daniel Acevedo, who is Christine Coffman's son, did not
appear in court yesterday.
Step-Grandmother Charged With
Murder of Missing Oregon Boy
FoxNews.com
July 2, 2005
ESTACADA, Ore. – The body of a 4-year-old boy
missing for three days was found in a wooded area about 25 miles
south of his home on Saturday, and his step-grandmother was
arrested and charged with murder after she led police to the site,
authorities said.
Matel Zachery Sanchez was reported missing from
his home in the Portland suburb of Milwaukie on Wednesday
afternoon.
Police initially assumed the child had gone on
an outing with Christine Coffman, 43, the mother of the child's
stepfather. When she returned home three hours after the child was
reported missing, police began to question her, Officer Kevin
Krebs said.
Police did not immediately say how the boy died
but a medical investigator determined the cause of death was
homicide.
"There is no indication that this was an
accident," Krebs said, but he declined to give any details on how
the boy died.
Coffman was arrested Saturday and was being
held at the Clackamas County Jail without bail. Police had
impounded her car two day earlier.
About 70 people, including FBI agents, had
searched for the boy after he was reported missing. Dogs and an
Oregon Army National Guard helicopter also were used in the
search.