Lonnie Loren Kocontes Escaped Feds' Grip for Ex-Wife's Murder But Not OC Authorities'
| Lonnie Kocontes |
It's even more remarkable when you consider local law enforcement did something the FBI tried and failed to do itself: arrest Lonnie Loren Kocontes for the murder of his ex-, Micki Kanesaki.
As my colleague R. Scott Moxley reported in November, the FBI and U.S. Attorney failed in the Ronald Reagan Federal Courthouse in Santa Ana to secure a murder indictment against 55-year-old Kocontes and was even ordered by U.S. Magistrate Judge Marc L. Goldman to return $1 million the government had confiscated from the suspect's accounts.
Indeed, Goldman at that time chided the feds for its lack of evidence showing Kocontes killed Kanesaki for financial gain, declaring that the FBI's reasoning in the case was erroneous, stale, illogical and "circular." Click on Mox's post if you missed it to see the extent at which Goldman dissected the government's case against Kocontes:
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One thus wonder what local investigators turned up to supposedly prove beyond a shadow of a doubt Kocontes committed, as the charges suggest, felony special circumstances murder for financial gain that, with a conviction, brings a minimum sentence of life in a California state prison without the possibility of parole. The OCDA could also pursue the death penalty. Schroeder explained to the media over the weekend that her agency could pursue the case because the murder plot was hatched in Orange County.
| Courtesy of OCSD |
| A past Micki Kanesaki booking photo |
Kocontes was arrested at his new home in Safety Harbor Friday by U.S. Marshals and Pinellas, Florida, sheriff's deputies. An OCDA statement on his looming extradition proceedings that will be followed by arraignment in the Orange County that's on this coast mentions that Kocontes' attempt with his new wife Katherine to move move than $1 million between various bank accounts--in other words, the transactions that the FBI and U.S. Attorney took before federal Judge Goldman--is part of the evidence that will be used locally against him in state court.
Federal prosecutors in 2010 "discussed the potential criminal case with the Orange County District Attorney's Office (OCDA) for possible review," reads the OCDA statement. "In 2012, the OCDA requested additional investigation on the case from the Orange County Sheriff's Department (OCSD), who discovered additional evidence related to the murder."
As we await the nature of that evidence, Kocontes is being held without bail, likely wishing he could hire Goldman to defend him. Meanwhile, the investigation continues, as the local agencies invite anyone with additional information related to the case to call Supervising District Attorney Investigator Randy Litwin at 714.347.8492 or sheriff's Investigator Don Voght at 714.647.7051.
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