Jonathan Luna

For the comic artist, see Luna Brothers.

Jonathan P. Luna (October 21, 1965 – December 4, 2003) was a Baltimore-based Assistant United States Attorney who was stabbed 36 times with his own penknife and found drowned in a creek in Lancaster County, Pennsylvania.

Personal background

Luna grew up in the projects in the South Bronx near Yankee Stadium. He was of African-American and Filipino ancestry. He was a graduate of Fordham University and the law school at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. He worked at Arnold & Porter in Washington, DC in 1993–1994 and the Federal Trade Commission in 1994–1997. He worked as a prosecutor in Brooklyn before moving to Baltimore. He was married to an obstetrician and had two children. He was 38 years old when he died.

The night he died: December 3–4, 2003

No suspects or motive for murder were determined. The federal authorities (FBI) lean toward calling it a suicide and came to the conclusion he was alone from time he left his office until his body was found,[1] but the local Lancaster County authorities, including two successive coroners, ruled it a homicide. Additional evidence collected during the investigation captured a second blood type and a partial print, as well as some grainy footage from near the time of the gas station purchase made with Luna's credit card at the Sunoco service plaza.[2] The investigation remains ongoing. There is an unclaimed federal reward of $100,000 for information leading to a conviction.

Suicide theory

It was initially reported that Luna did not have the expected substantial defense wounds on his hands and that many of the wounds are shallow which are called "hesitation" wounds in a suicide victim. These claims were rebuffed by the coroners' office, which stated that his hands had been "shredded" and that he experienced significant slashing to the throat and scrotum.[3] Some suggested motives for suicide were that Luna was to take a polygraph test concerning $36,000 which disappeared from a bank robbery case that he had prosecuted. Luna had a charge card which his wife, Angela, did not know about.[4] His name was on an Internet dating site and he had a $25,000 credit card debt.[4] There is also an accidental suicide theory that Luna was fabricating a kidnapping and attack and that he went too far.

Homicide theory

The Lancaster County coroner's office, who performed the autopsy, has stated in unambiguous terms that they rule Luna's death as a homicide due to the nature and type of the wounds.[5] Luna left his glasses, which he needed to drive, and his cell phone on his desk. He had called defense attorneys earlier in the night saying he would fax over documents that night but they never arrived. The pool of blood in the back seat would suggest Luna was in back and someone else was driving.

Inquest

In early February 2007, a private investigator and an attorney, both hired by Luna's family, filed a petition for a writ of mandamus in order to force the Lancaster County coroner to conduct an inquest into Luna's death, after an earlier request was declined.[6]

See also

References

  1. Sun, Baltimore. "5 years later, prosecutor's death still a mystery". baltimoresun.com.
  2. Sun, Baltimore. "Probe in killing of prosecutor Luna stalls". baltimoresun.com.
  3. "yardbird.com: Witness: Luna stabbed in back, his hands and scrotum viciously slashed". yardbird.com.
  4. 1 2 Hewitt, Bill (22 December 2003). "Who Killed Jonathan Luna?". People Magazine. 60. Retrieved 30 August 2010.
  5. Sun, Baltimore. "5 years later, prosecutor's death still a mystery". baltimoresun.com.
  6. "Private Investigator Wants Jonathan Luna Case Reopened". WBAL Radio. 2007-02-26. Archived from the original on 2007-09-27. Retrieved 2007-02-26.
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