{"id":484,"date":"2018-06-22T09:37:00","date_gmt":"2018-06-22T16:37:00","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/spijue.wpengine.com\/news\/appeals-court-upholds-yakutat-murder-conviction\/"},"modified":"2018-08-13T12:55:33","modified_gmt":"2018-08-13T19:55:33","slug":"appeals-court-upholds-yakutat-murder-conviction","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/www.juneauempire.com\/news\/appeals-court-upholds-yakutat-murder-conviction\/","title":{"rendered":"Appeals court upholds Yakutat murder conviction"},"content":{"rendered":"
The Alaska Court of Appeals has upheld the conviction<\/a> of a Washington state man for a 1996 murder in Yakutat<\/a>.<\/p>\n Robert Kowalski, 57, was originally convicted in 2014 of murdering Sandra Perry, his girlfriend, while the two vacationed in Yakutat. After being sentenced to 40 years in prison by Juneau Superior Court Judge Louis Menendez, Kowalski appealed his conviction and argued that the state improperly introduced evidence of a homicide he committed in Montana.<\/p>\n Alaska State Troopers had considered Perry’s 1996 death an accident at a time, but a similar 2008 slaying in Montana convinced them to reopen the case, leading to the 2014 trial and conviction. In the 2008 killing, Kowalski shot and killed his girlfriend, Lorraine Morin, and surrendered to police after a 30-hour standoff.<\/p>\n On appeal in the Alaska case, Kowalski argued that the state improperly used a rule of evidence that was created in 1997, one year after Perry’s death. Because the rule was created after the crime, he contended that its use violated the ex post facto clauses of the Alaska Constitution and U.S. Constitution. Those clauses<\/a> prohibit legislative action from applying to an event that happened before the action took place.<\/p>\n