Quantcast
breaking news

Rodriguez Trial Begins Monday

By: Lauren Murphy
Updated: March 25, 2008
ROSENDO2008-03-21-1206156085.jpg

Rosendo Rodriguez turns twenty-eight next week, but he'll spend his birthday fighting for his life in a Randall County courtroom.

He could face the death penalty if convicted.

Rodriguez is the son of a lawyer.

He grew up in Wichita Falls and graduated from high school there in 1998.

That same year, he moved to Lubbock, enrolled at Texas Tech, and pledged Omega Delta Phi.

The other members later voted to remove him.

Rodriguez never graduated from Tech.

Instead, he joined the Marine reserves, but after he was connected with Baldwin's murder.

She was found September 13, 2005 in a suitcase at a city landfill.

The autopsy revealed she was five weeks pregnant, and she may have been alive when she was stuffed in the bag.

Police tracked the barcode inside the suitcase to a local Walmart, and to a debit card belonging to Rodriguez.

Surveillance video showed him buying that suitcase and a pair of latex gloves.

On September 15, 2005, police arrested Rodriguez at his father's house in San Antonio.

A month later, a grand jury indicted him for capital murder.

Then, the pieces began to fit together in the disappearance of a local teenager, missing since May 4, 2004.

Joanna Rogers was a junior at Lubbock High School.

She was active in theater, debate, and dance.

She also volunteered at the South Plains Wildlife Rehabilitation Center.

On May 3, 2004 Joanna returned from work around midnight.

After Rodriguez's arrest in the Baldwin case, investigators linked him to Joanna through information found on their computers.

In June, a reported confession tape led investigators back to the landfill, and on October 24, 2006, they found Joanna in a suitcase.

Rodriguez was expected to plead guilty, as part of a deal to avoid the death penalty.

Instead, he stood in front of a judge and said he did not understand the agreement.

After two attempts to keep the trial in Lubbock, the judge decided to move it to Randall county, where the jurors are not familiar with the case.

KLBK's Lauren Murphy will be covering the entire trial via satellite from Randall County.

Comments

Readers Feel...

hello
Related Content

Graduation ceremonies were held today for students from three high schools in an Oklahoma community ravaged by a monstrous tornado, marking a bittersweet end to a week that brought fatalities and...

A woman has been killed in flooding in the San Antonio area....

After hearing about the destruction in Oklahoma 7 year old Laney James decided to hold her own donation drive for the families who lost everything in this weeks tornado. ...

COLUMBUS, Ohio A baby gorilla has been born to first-time parents at an Ohio zoo....

Elayna Nigrelli's birth story is almost unbelievable: The infant girl was born while her mother didn't have a pulse....

Sen. Ted Cruz doesn't have as many friends as he says he does. In the latest round of Cruz's simmering debate with Sen. John McCain (who labeled Cruz a "wacko bird"), Cruz spoke of "my friend, the a...

As part of their effort to attract tourists back to the storm-ravaged Jersey Shore for the summer season, New Jersey officials kicked off the season Friday by cutting 5.5-mile ribbon connecting --...

The Texas Tech Wind Science and Engineering spent Thursday following storms through the South Plains, looking for data on the wind. KLBK's Monica Yantosh reports....

With a 3 day holiday weekend millions of people across the U.S. will be traveling this weekend....

The organizers behind a petition to recall Councilman Victor Hernandez submitted 586 signatures to the Lubbock City Secretary on Friday....

 
 
 
 
 
©1998 - 2013 Everythinglubbock.com
Nexstar Broadcasting, Inc.
All Rights Reserved