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Thread: Christopher Lynn Johnson - Pennsylvania Death Row

  1. #11
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    WCO murder trial postponed

    A murder trial for the 27-year-old Fairfield man charged with killing Adams County Wildlife Conservation Officer David Grove has been moved from June 2011 to January 2012.

    Christopher Lynn Johnson is accused of fatally shooting Grove on Nov. 11, 2010 during a vehicle stop on Schriver Road in Freedom Township.

    Defense attorney Kristin Rice called it “inconceivable” to be prepared for trial by the scheduled June 6 date.

    “It is very rare that a murder case goes to trial in the first year,” said Adams County Common Pleas Judge Michael George. “I am not going to do anything to jeopardize either side’s ability to present their case, but we also are not going to let this thing drag on as we get closer to trial.”

    Police allege Grove was investigating a poaching violation involving Johnson and his passenger Ryan Laumann.

    According to court documents, while Grove was handcuffing him, Johnson reached for his gun and both men fired multiple shots. Grove fell to the ground and Johnson fled.

    Adams County District Attorney Shawn Wagner said he intends to seek the death penalty and filed a notice of aggravating circumstances in January.

    On Monday, George set a June 30 deadline for Wagner to identify experts who will testify on the prosecution’s behalf. He has already indicated he will likely call forensic pathology, DNA, ballistics and serology experts.

    June 30 is also a deadline for Rice to notify the court of any potential defense such as one for mental health reasoning, which she called “a possibility.”

    Both parties will return to court on May 16 for a number of pre-trial motions filed by Rice including one to move the trial from Adams County.

    Rice cited pre-trial publicity as a rationale for the motion.

    George will also entertain a motion for suppression of evidence which Rice indicated would relate to statements Johnson made to authorities en route to York Hospital the day following the shooting.

    “We hope to have testimony as to whether (Johnson) was under the influence of medication and/or alcohol at the time of the statements,” Rice told the court.

    At a preliminary hearing, State Trooper Neal Navitsky, who rode with Johnson to York Hospital, testified Johnson told him, “I didn’t want to go back to jail. (Grove) cuffed my right hand and I reached with the left hand for the pistol. He saw it or had a bad feeling and told me not to do it. He opened fire and I fired a few shots. He shot first. I don’t know if that was the one that hit me or not. I broke the handcuff and Ryan ran around and got in the passenger side and we left.”

    Johnson was not allowed to be carrying a firearm due to a previous conviction.

    Rice has also filed a motion to quash the claim of aggravating circumstances, particularly the part that identifies Grove as a prosecution witness.

    Both sides were ordered to file a memorandum supporting their positions prior to May 16.

    http://www.gettysburgtimes.com/news/...cc4c002e0.html

  2. #12
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    Change of venue sought in trial of man charged in Pa. wildlife officer's slaying

    The Adams County public defender representing a Fairfield, Pa., man charged in the 2010 shooting death of Pennsylvania Wildlife Conservation Officer David Grove has asked an Adams County Common Pleas Court judge to grant a change of venue, citing pre-trial publicity in the case.

    Assistant Public Defender Kristin L. Rice has also filed a motion to suppress statements made to police by Christopher Lynn Johnson following his apprehension in the Nov. 11, 2010, shooting of Grove, who grew up in Waynesboro, Pa., and attended Grace Academy in Hagerstown.

    Adams County District Attorney Shawn Wagner would not comment on the case following Monday morning’s pre-trial hearing, citing Rice’s motion for a change of venue.

    Judge Michael George scheduled a June 28 hearing on the change of venue motion to move the case to another county and the suppression of Johnson’s statements.

    At that time, the judge also will hear arguments on a defense motion to dismiss the notice of aggravating circumstances filed by the state.

    Wagner in January filed the notice of aggravating circumstances necessary to seek the death penalty in Pennsylvania.

    In that filing, Wagner cited three circumstances: that Grove was a law enforcement officer killed in the line of duty; that it was an intentional killing committed in the course of a felony; and that Grove was killed to prevent him from testifying to the felony.

    Wagner told George on Monday that one of the three aggravating circumstances cited by the state — the killing of a law enforcement officer in the line of duty — cannot be refuted.

    Wagner also informed the court that he might file a fourth aggravating circumstance, contending that the killing was committed by a person with “a history of violent crimes.”

    Grove was shot four times on the night of Nov. 11 after he pulled over a pickup truck in Freedom Township, Pa., on suspicion of poaching, authorities have said.

    During Johnson’s November 2010 preliminary hearing, audio tapes of Grove’s radio transmissions were played in the courtroom. Grove reported seeing a spotlight and hearing gunfire, and pulling over the truck. Grove radioed that the occupants of the truck were armed, and he requested backup.

    Johnson, who was shot once in the exchange of gunfire with Grove, was arrested Nov. 12, 2010.

    http://www.herald-mail.com/news/hm-c...,4097608.story

  3. #13
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    Farmer testifies at hearing in Adams County regarding slaying of wildlife conservation officer

    An area farmer testified Monday that he gave a ride to the man who allegedly killed a wildlife conservation officer, and despite arguments that injuries and a night in the cold had left the wanted man incoherent, the farmer said he seemed to be fine.

    Chief Public Defender Kristin Rice is arguing that her client, Christopher L. Johnson, 28, Carroll Valley, had lost a significant quantity of blood due to a gunshot wound to the leg, was dehydrated, and was hypothermic when he made a statement to police following the Nov. 11 shooting death of Wildlife Conservation Officer David L. Grove, 31, Fairfield.

    A hearing to suppress those statements, and to hear other motions made by the defense, is scheduled for June 28, but testimony was taken from one witness on Monday.

    Edmund Miller, who has been an orchard foreman at Bream Orchards in Orrtanna for 38 years, testified that while driving along Bingaman Road the morning of Nov. 12, he saw Johnson limping along, and offered him a ride.

    "You look like you're hurt. Would you like a ride?" Miller said when he pulled over, according to his testimony.

    Johnson reluctantly got in the Ford Ranger, and was not particularly talkative during the ride, but seemed to be coherent and alert, Miller testified. There was no apparent blood from his injury, just a pronounced limp, which Johnson allegedly told Miller he got when he slipped on some rocks.

    Miller drove Johnson south along Orrtanna Road, and Johnson told him to turn off on a dirt lane, where he would walk the rest of the way.

    Miller let Johnson out of the truck, and said "police appeared from everywhere." Police arrested Johnson, and ordered Miller out of the truck. Miller said he was handcuffed, placed in a police car, and brought back to the state police barracks, where he explained the circumstances and was released.

    In addition to trying to suppress statements Johnson made to the police, Rice is also seeking to change the venue for Johnson's trial. She said in May that the amount of pretrial publicity might compromise the defense's ability to pick an impartial jury in Adams County.

    District Attorney Shawn Wagner filed notice with the court in January that he is seeking the death penalty against Johnson. Rice's motion to quash two of the three necessary aggravating circumstances will also be heard by the court next week.

    In Pennsylvania, one of a list of 18 aggravating circumstances must be present for a penalty of death to be imposed.

    Rice wants to quash the circumstance of Johnson's alleged killing of a potential prosecution witness to a felony, and the circumstance of killing a witness while in perpetration of a felony.

    She did not file a motion to quash the third aggravating circumstance, which is the killing of a law-enforcement officer in the line of duty.

    According to court documents, Johnson and Ryan Laumann, 19, Fairfield, were spotting deer, and were pulled over on Schriver Road by Grove after shooting a spike buck.

    Johnson is a convicted felon prohibited from carrying firearms, and had a .45-caliber pistol. He allegedly told his passenger that he did not want to go back to jail for carrying the gun.

    They got out of the vehicle, and Grove and Johnson exchanged fire, according to court documents. Johnson left the scene, dropped off Laumann, and fled, according to court documents.

    But Grove, who was pronounced dead at the scene, had radioed for backup prior to the shooting, and had given authorities the license plate number of Johnson's truck, information which police later said was instrumental in tracking him down.

    Johnson was arrested the next morning.

    Johnson faces charges of murder in the first and third degrees. If convicted of first-degree murder, a jury will decide if he will get the death penalty, or if he will spend his life in prison without parole. The death penalty will be imposed if at least one of the aggravating circumstances is present, and there are no mitigating circumstances.

    In addition to the murder charges, Johnson also faces charges of persons not to possess firearms, flight to avoid apprehension, firearms not to be carried without a license, possessing an instrument of crime, resisting or interfering with an officer, unlawful use of lights while hunting and unlawful killing or taking of big game.

    http://www.publicopiniononline.com/c...ce=most_viewed

  4. #14
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    Judge asked to suppress statement by man charged in Pa. wildlife officer's slaying

    GETTYSBURG, Pa.— The public defender representing a Fairfield, Pa., man charged in the November 2010 shooting death of Pennsylvania Wildlife Conservation Officer David Grove on Tuesday asked an Adams County Common Pleas Court judge to suppress a statement made by Christopher Lynn Johnson following his arrest.

    In an effort to keep her client’s statement from being heard at his trial, Adams County Assistant Public Defender Kristin L. Rice questioned the circumstances under which Johnson was questioned during the 55-minute ambulance ride from where he was arrested in Adams County to York Hospital.

    Police say Johnson was shot in an exchange of gunfire with Grove.

    David Millstein, a medic who attended to Johnson during the ride described Johnson’s gunshot wound to the right hip as not being life-threatening and that Johnson was conscious, alert and coherent as he asked him about his condition.

    Rice questioned Millstein as to whether he withheld morphine from Johnson at the request of a Pennsylvania State Police trooper who was in the ambulance.

    Millstein testified that at the time the officer asked if he was going to administer the painkiller, he replied that he had not received permission from the hospital to give him the drug.

    Millstein testified during questioning by District Attorney Shawn Wagner that Johnson did not show symptoms of dehydration, hypothermia or excessive blood loss from being shot and then staying in the woods overnight before he was apprehended.

    Rice previously filed a motion for change of venue in the case.

    Grove was shot four times on the night of Nov. 11, 2010, after he pulled over a pickup truck in Freedom Township, Pa., on suspicion of poaching, authorities have said. The fatal shot was to the back of his neck, according to testimony at a preliminary hearing for Johnson.

    Grove grew up in Waynesboro, Pa., and attended Grace Academy in Hagerstown.

    Judge Michael George scheduled today’s hearing on the motion to suppress Johnson’s statements.

    Wagner in January filed a notice of aggravating circumstances necessary to seek the death penalty in Pennsylvania. In that filing, Wagner cited three circumstances: that Grove was a law enforcement officer killed in the line of duty; that it was an intentional killing committed in the course of a felony; and that Grove was killed to prevent him from testifying to the felony.

    Wagner told George on Monday that one of the three aggravating circumstances cited by the state — the killing of a law enforcement officer in the line of duty — cannot be refuted. Wagner also informed the court that he might file a fourth aggravating circumstance, contending that the killing was committed by a person with "a history of violent crimes."

    Johnson faces more than a dozen charges, including first-degree and third-degree murder, being a felon in possession of a firearm, carrying a firearm without a license, poaching and flight to avoid apprehension, court records show.

    http://www.herald-mail.com/news/hm-j...,2858496.story

  5. #15
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    Update

    A hearing to suppress statements made to police by a man charged with the murder of Pennsylvania Wildlife Conservation Officer David Grove concluded this week, but a ruling on defense motions is several weeks away, District Attorney Shawn Wagner said.

    http://articles.herald-mail.com/2011...michael-george

  6. #16
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    In year since officer David Grove's death, has Pa. Game Commission made the job safer?

    Adams County Wildlife Conservation Officer David Grove was gunned down a year ago, after making a stop for suspected deer poaching.

    The 31-year-old officer had seen spotlighting, heard gunshots in Freedom Township around 10 p.m., and then pulled two men in a pickup truck over on Schriver Road.

    Within minutes the young lawman lay dead, shot multiple times during a "ferocious exchange of gunfire." Christopher Lynn Johnson, 27, was charged with Grove's murder and could face the death penalty.

    Grove has been remembered as a finely trained officer. The Pennsylvania Game Commission's initial review did not find any major deficiencies in training, equipment, policy or actions by Grove.

    Those close to the job that mixes guns, back roads, outlaws, darkness, desperation, often alcohol, and authority say it's a miracle that for nearly 100 years, from 1915 to Nov. 11, 2010, no officer had been killed in the line of duty.

    Grove's brethren believe it will happen again.

    The commission trains and employs 100 WCOs, and hundreds of others in roles charged with protecting the commonwealth's wild resources.

    In the year since Grove's death, what has the commission done to the make the job safer or more productive for its Wildlife officers?

    What policies have been changed? Are being implemented? Still being contemplated?

    The commission's Use of Force Incident Review Committee has put its administrative investigation on hold until the criminal work and prosecution is complete.

    "No significant changes have been implemented other than focusing pre-planned, in-service training on some skill areas, such as vehicle stops," said Rich Palmer, director of the commission's Bureau of Wildlife Protection.

    Since Grove's death, the commission has been training its officers in vehicle stop procedures and techniques.

    "It was excellent training. I've got to hand it to the agency," said WCO Frank Dooley of Wayne County, who conducted the training. "They saw the need for this in the wake of the Grove tragedy."

    For security reasons, officials are hesitant to discuss specifics of the training, other than that officers will be better at identifying higher risk suspects.

    Dooley, with 34 years as a conservation officer, is also president of the Conservation Police Officers Lodge 114 of the Fraternal Order of Police. He represents full-time officers of the state Game and Fish & Boat commissions, doing arbitrations and grievances.

    In another move, since Grove's death, officers' vehicles are being labeled with "Law enforcement" decals to make them look more official and to change the perception that Wildlife conservation officers are not law enforcement.

    "Our image needs to change and I'm not sure we've done enough," Dooley said. "After the (Grove) funeral, some of the management said, 'We're seeing conservation officers from all over the country and their vehicles are highly marked. That's the way it should be.' It's gonna take about a year to get all of them."

    There was also a need to distinguish law officers from other commission employees - all of them driving the same types of vehicles.

    "The vehicle marking upgrades were not in response to the Grove incident. Rather prior planned general upgrades," Palmer said.

    Officers in the field dispute that. The union had sought the lettering for some time.

    "That was a tough fight for us," Dooley said of getting the decals. "We're in obscurity. What we should be doing is projecting who we are and that we are the conservation police. A lot of times, people will walk up to us and say, 'why do you guys carry a gun'?"

    Dooley would like to see the job title changed to conservation police officer.

    "There is an image problem there that needs to be resolved. We need to change the culture and that includes from within," he said.

    After his arrest for Grove's shooting, Johnson was asked if he knew that he'd shot a police officer. He replied, "no, I thought it was a game warden."

    "We may stop someone for hunting without fluorescent orange, which is a minor violation, most officers would give a warning for that," Dooley explained. "But this individual is a convicted felon who cannot have guns and he still wants to go out hunting and he sees us coming and something serious may happen, like what happened in the case of Johnson. He knew that if he got caught with a gun he was probably going back to jail again. Those are the kinds of things that we run into.

    "The people who are out poaching deer at night and going around shooting, are generally the same people that the state police deal with kicking doors in in hunting cabins and burglarizing places. In many cases they are under the influence of narcotics or alcohol. And we're dealing with these people."

    The union asked for a policy change because "full-time officers are riding alone all of the time," Dooley said. "We need more full-time conservation officers in Pennsylvania." The well-trained Grove was alone when he stopped Johnson on that fateful night last Nov. 11.

    "Right after (Dave Grove's death) two of our officers were shot at by a convicted felon up in a treehouse who knew he was gonna get arrested, plus he was on medication and shooting at our officers," Dooley said. "Two-hundred five yards. What were they going to return fire with? They were issued shotguns, virtually worthless after 50 yards. We petitioned and (the commission) said it would be too costly to do that."

    Twenty-six districts are without officers now and more will leave due to retirement or promotion. Resupplying with one graduating class from the officers academy each year won't keep up the with the shortage.

    In early 2011, Kevin Anderson of Perry County graduated from the academy and took Grove's post in southern Adams County. Darren David patrols northern Adams.

    Districts recently underwent redistricting which spread some officers out even more. Carbon County went from two full-time officers to one officer and doubled his patrol district. In Clinton County, that officer went from 400 to 800 square miles.

    Communication is key in the field. Officers would like to have portable radios that allow them to maintain contact with either the commission's regional office or local county dispatch when they are out of the vehicle. Some dispatches from commission regional offices do not operate overnight.

    "All depends on where you are," Dooley said. "Upstate they still have good contact with local dispatchers. Many parts they don't have that luxury and some counties don't want their officers on (the radio)." Dooley said the FOP has requested the radios and they may be coming soon.

    Grove was able to contact dispatch after the poaching stop. Backup arrived in two minutes. Too late.

    WCOs have also found themselves outgunned. Officers have asked for tactical patrol rifles (M-16s) and were denied by regional directors.

    "Right after (Dave Grove's death) two of our officers were shot at by a convicted felon up in a treehouse who knew he was gonna get arrested, plus he was on medication and shooting at our officers," Dooley said. "Two-hundred five yards. What were they going to return fire with? They were issued shotguns, virtually worthless after 50 yards. We petitioned and (the commission) said it would be too costly to do that." The high-caliber long-range rifles can also be used to dispatch wounded animals.

    Officers in Pennsylvania want to be armed similarly to their counterparts in other states.

    "You are going to be hard-pressed to find a conservation officer in the country who isn't issued a patrol rifle by their agency," Dooley said.

    Officers would also like secondary intermediate weapons like a baton or Taser.

    The commission is said to be continuing to review the use of car cameras. Grove had a dash camera in his vehicle. Body cameras are also considered.

    The commission said work on a computer aided dispatch system (enabling an officer to access vehicle information) began more than two years ago and is being implemented now.

    "I'm not sure how that is going to improve officer safety," Dooley said.

    WCOs want the same "heart and lung" benefit afforded to other law enforcement. Officers shot and surviving would receive full pay while recovering, as opposed to getting workmen's compensation. The commission is against it.

    "They felt it's an open area for abuse," Dooley said. "But the PGC is at the top of the state in unused sick leave. It would be essential to this agency and its officers."

    The commission also opposed legislation to give its officers Vehicle Code 75 authority for summary offenses.

    "They don't want (a WCO) pulling a guy over and giving him a ticket. That's not what officers want to do," Dooley said. "It would be a fantastic tool to enforce poaching in the state. If we could use that traffic violation authority as probable cause, to stop someone with a broken tail-light or burned out license, those could be our poachers. That's a whole different story."

    The commission has some work to do on officer compensation.

    "As for payscale, we are lower than most Wildlife agencies in the Eastern corridor," Dooley said, "in states like New Jersey, New York." In Pennsylvania, cadets receive a first-year salary of $29,000 while at the academy. After graduation and during a probationary first-year in the field, they reach $38,200.

    As for retirement, Executive Director Carl Roe has submitted written support to the Senate for a package that entails 20 years' service, 50 years of age at retirement.

    "As we approach the anniversary of WCO David Grove's murder, we are reminded that the Wildlife protection activities of our conservation officers are not without risk and are often dangerous," PGC boss Carl Roe said. "We continuously look for ways to reduce those risks. Some methods are to reinforce the excellent training they already receive, and others are long-term investments in systems that will enhance officer security. We will never eliminate all the risks of doing law enforcement."

    "You gotta know the feeling of stopping someone who's just committed some kind of violation at 2 a.m. in the morning and there's three guys in a pickup truck," Dooley said. "You're alone and you know your backup is probably 30 miles away and you've got to have some tact. You've got to be able to handle these people. Not everyone can do it. Officer safety is paramount with us."

    http://www.therepublic.com/view/stor...-Game-Officer/

  7. #17
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    Outside jury slated for death penalty trial in slaying of central Pa. wildlife officer

    A jury from another county will be brought in to hear the death penalty trial of a central Pennsylvania man accused of having gunned down a wildlife conservation officer.

    An Adams County judge agreed to a defense request for a jury to be chosen in another county and brought in for the trial of 28-year-old Christopher Johnson of Fairfield.

    Johnson is charged in the November 2010 shooting death of wildlife conservation officer David Grove outside Gettysburg.

    Officials said Grove was patrolling on his own along a dark stretch of rural road when he confronted a poacher and was shot four times.

    Chief Public Defender Kristin Rice argued that pre-trial publicity had been "so pervasive and sustained" that her client would have been unable to get a fair trial.

    http://www.therepublic.com/view/stor...Officer-Slain/

  8. #18
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    Motions made in death-penalty case

    In the build-up to the June death-penalty trial of a Fairfield man accused of shooting and killing a wildlife conservation officer, the prosecution is asking the judge to allow the defendant's criminal history to be admitted at trial.

    Adams County District Attorney Shawn Wagner said statements allegedly made by Christopher L. Johnson, 28, about his criminal past are evidence of motive in his alleged killing of Wildlife Conservation Officer David L. Grove.

    Court documents indicate that on Nov. 11, Grove pulled Johnson over on the suspicion of illegally killing a deer. Johnson, who has a 2002 burglary conviction, told his passenger, Ryan Laumann, 19, of Fairfield, that it was illegal for him to carry a gun because he was a felon, and he did not want to go to jail again, court documents state.

    Johnson got out of the truck, and he and Grove exchanged fire, according to court documents.

    Johnson was struck in the hip, and fled. Grove was pronounced dead at the scene.

    Wagner is asking Judge Michael A. George to allow Johnson's prior bad acts to be admissible at trial, specifically Johnson's alleged statement of being a felon who was not permitted to carry a gun, and not wanting to go to jail again.

    Chief Public Defender Kristin Rice opposed the motion. Both are to submit briefs outlining their positions to the judge within three weeks before he makes a ruling.

    Wagner also told the court he has not yet received the reports from several defense experts, but Rice

    said these experts are part of the defense team, and will not be testifying at trial, which does not require her to submit their reports.
    One is a mental-health expert, and while he will not be testifying at trial, Rice said he will provide testimony during the sentencing phase if Johnson is found guilty by a jury.

    If that happens, the judge ordered the expert's report be provided to the prosecution prior to the sentencing hearing, where the death penalty could be imposed.

    Johnson's trial is slated to commence June 11 in Adams County court. A jury is being selected May 21 at the Lancaster County Courthouse.

    The judge previously granted the defense's request to bring in a jury from elsewhere due to the defense's argument that the amount of news coverage could taint the jury pool, making it difficult for Johnson to receive a fair trial before an Adams County jury.

    In seeking the death penalty in Pennsylvania, at least one of a list of 18 aggravating circumstances must be present. Wagner filed for three -- the killing of a potential witness to a felony, the killing of a witness while in perpetration of a felony and the killing of a law-enforcement officer in the line of duty -- at Johnson's arraignment in January 2011.

    If a jury finds Johnson guilty, and finds at least one aggravating circumstances is present, and there are not mitigating circumstances, the death penalty could be imposed.

    Johnson faces charges of murder in the first and third degrees, persons not to possess firearms, flight to avoid apprehension, firearms not to be carried without a license, possessing an instrument of crime, resisting or interfering with an officer, unlawful use of lights while hunting and unlawful killing or taking of big game.

    http://www.eveningsun.com/news/ci_20...h-penalty-case

  9. #19
    Jan
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    Jury selection begins in wildlife officer's death

    An out-of-county jury is being picked for the murder trial of a man accused of killing a Pennsylvania Game Commission wildlife officer almost two years ago.

    Jury selection began Monday in Lancaster for Christopher Lynn Johnson's upcoming trial in the November 2010 killing of wildlife conservation officer David Grove.

    Officials say Grove was patrolling a dark stretch of rural road near Gettysburg when he confronted a poacher and was shot four times. Police say Johnson admitted the killing, saying he was a felon in possession of a gun and didn't want to go back to prison.

    Johnson has pleaded not guilty. Adams County prosecutors say they'll seek the death penalty if he's convicted of first-degree murder.

    Johnson's trial is scheduled to open Sept. 24.

    http://www.ydr.com/state/ci_21416151...officers-death

  10. #20
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    Out-of-town jury chosen for game warden case

    An out-of-town jury has been picked to hear a potential death-penalty case against a man accused of killing a game warden in Central Pennsylvania. Christopher Lynn Johnson goes on trial in Adams County on Sept. 24. He is charged with fatally shooting state wildlife officer David Grove in November 2010. Sixteen Lancaster County residents will travel about 50 miles daily to the Adams County courthouse in Gettysburg.

    http://www.philly.com/philly/news/pe...rden_case.html
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