The
jury will begin deliberating Friday whether Alex and Derek King, now
13 and 14, are guilty of first-degree murder, a verdict that would
send them to prison for the rest of their lives.
Assistant State Attorney David Rimmer also asked jurors in his
closing argument to guard against being swayed by anger with
convicted child molester Ricky Chavis, who also was charged with the
murder.
"You don't like Chavis?" Rimmer asked. "Nobody likes Chavis.
Chavis is the kind of guy everybody wants to hate. What's lower than
a child molester?"
Firefighters found the body of Terry King, 40, on a recliner
inside his burning home in nearby Cantonment.
The brothers have repudiated confessions they gave police a day
after the murder. They now say Chavis is the real killer. Alex also
testified he once loved Chavis, 40, and repeatedly had sex with him.
The Truth Is in
the Details
Rimmer, however, argued the boys were telling the truth when they
admitted the killing to Escambia County sheriff's investigators. He
said their confessions are filled with the kind of detail only
someone who was there would have known.
Defense lawyers contended the boys confessed to protect Chavis
and parroted what he had coached them to say. That included such
gory details as being able to see the victim's brain through a hole
in his head and the raspy sound of his last gasps.
"Everyone in this courtroom can repeat those details," said James
Stokes, Alex's lawyer. "The boys' stories line up because the boys'
stories are rehearsed."
The boys changed their stories more than four months after the
murder, telling a grand jury that Chavis killed their father while
they hid in the trunk of Chavis' car.
The grand jury then indicted Chavis, who was tried last week. His
verdict has been sealed until after the King brothers' trial ends.
In the boys' case, Rimmer argued Derek swung the bat while Alex
urged him to commit the killing, just as the brothers had originally
confessed.
All three defendants are facing a mandatory penalty of life in
prison without parole if convicted of first-degree murder. Each also
is charged with arson.
One Brother Opts
Not to Testify
Earlier today, Derek took the witness stand only to tell Circuit
Judge Frank Bell he would not testify in his own defense.
"Yes sir, it was my decision," Derek said in a clear, strong
voice.
His soft-spoken brother testified Wednesday that the brothers
took the blame because they wanted to live with Chavis and he had
told them they would be exonerated by claiming self-defense because
they are juveniles. Both boys testified against Chavis last week.
Sharon Potter, one of Derek's lawyers, said in her closing that
the boys had no motive to kill their father but Chavis did. She said
he wanted to keep Terry King from finding out he was having sex with
Alex.
Rimmer argued the boys' motive was to escape from a controlling
father and live with Chavis. He let them play video games, stay up
late watching television and smoke marijuana when they went to his
house after running away from home 10 days before the killing,
Rimmer said.
He also pointed to Alex's affection for Chavis, reading from
several love letters he had written including one that ended "Before
I met Rick I was straight but now I am gay." 
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