Current Affairs

Colorado man was accused again of killing the wife of the first degree that was lost in 2020


The Public Prosecutor’s Office in the twelfth judicial province said in a statement that a man from Colorado suspected of killing his wife was accused on Friday for the second time of the first degree killing at her death for the year 2020.

Paris Morveio was previously charged with first -degree murder, among other charges, in May 2021 in the killing of his wife, Susan Morphyo, who was last seen on Mother’s Day in 2020. But these charges were dropped without bias – which means that accusations can be taken again on a later date – in April 2022, the plaintiffs were closed to the residues of the woman.

The provincial prosecutor’s office said that officials took Morevio on Friday in the state of Arizona, but the office is working to hand over the man to the Saint Louis Valley in Colorado.

Barry Morveio outside the Shafi Provincial Court, around January 2022.Dateline

It was not immediately clear whether Morvio was in prison or obtained legal representation.

Iris Eytan, the lawyer who represented Morphew, did not respond to the previous charges, immediately to request a comment. It was not immediately clear if she was still representing him.

Susan Morveio was last seen on May 10, 2020, near the District of 225 and West Highway 50 in Maysville, about 100 miles west of Colorado Springs. She was riding a bike at that time.

Susan Morphyo, a 49 -year -old mother, was lost from her home in Shafi district on the same day. On that day, her mountain bike and helmet were discovered on the side of a province in Salida, Colorado, near the family’s home.

Murder
Suzan Morveio.Shafi Sharif County Office

Her husband has repeatedly denied his involvement in her death and acknowledged that he was not guilty of initial charges.

One week before Morphyo appointed the trial on charges of first killing of the first degree killing in the disappearance of his wife, the Public Prosecution refused the charges because they said that they had rotated in an area they believed to be its remains, but the weather in the area was preventing officials from recovering efforts, and slowing the case.

Officials said at the time that the remains of Susan Morphyo were recently discovered in September 2023. They were found during unrelated research near Moves in Sagawash Province.

An autopsy in April 2024 decided that she died due to the murder, which stated that the drugs were usually used as a drainage that was found in its system.

The report of the province of LASO, obtained by NBC News at the time, said that Susan Morpio “died as a result of killing by unlimited means of Potorfanol, Zaprunon and Midomidine’s poisoning.”

“Medicines are marketed as a chemical compound that is injected to wildlife that provides reverse relief, anesthesia, and freezing,” according to the report.

Prosecutors said they believed that Morvio used a quiet pistol in the killing of his wife. They also said that he was the only one to hold a motivation to kill Suzan Murphyo, because she was suffering from an affair, who believed that her husband also had one, and he had plans to submit a divorce.

Days before she disappeared, Susan Morveio wrote her husband that their relationship was “done”, according to the initial detention certificate from 2021.

“Let’s deal with this civilian,” she said, according to the written statement.

The statement said: “It has become clear that Barry could not control Susan’s insistence on leaving him, and he resorted to something he did throughout his life – chasing and observing Suzan as he was hunting and controlling animals.”

Morevio also filed a $ 15 million lawsuit against the authorities who accused him of killing his wife in May 2023. At that time, the daughters of the couple spoke to support their father.

The provincial prosecutor’s office said in a Friday edition that the investigation of the death of Susan Morveio was continuing.

“The implementation of the federal, state and local law did not stop working towards justice for Susan,” said Anne Kelly, the lawyer for the judicial region.

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