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  • 19
    Jul
    2012
    10:15am, EDT

    Warrants in Marine wife murder case reveal text messages, sex dungeon

    View more videos at: http://nbcsandiego.com.

    By NBC News staff and wire reports

    Three roommates involved with a "sex dungeon" at their home may have murdered a Marine's wife in California as they tried to satisfy their fetishes, investigators say in newly unsealed search warrants.

    Detectives found "bondage type sex apparatuses, toys and tools" at the home of the two women and man who have been charged with murder in the death of 22-year-old Brittany Killgore. Her body was found near a Southern California lake on April 17, less than a week after she was reported missing.


    Follow @NBCNewsUS

    Investigators believe all three suspects were with Killgore at their home in Fallbrook, north of San Diego, shortly after the victim sent a desperate text message to a friend, "Help."

    Killgore was last seen April 13 in a borrowed purple evening gown, three days after she filed for divorce from Lance Cpl. Cory Killgore, who was serving in Afghanistan at the time. The documents say her body was found with neck injuries consistent with strangulation and marks on her wrist and leg that suggested someone tried to use a saw or other tool to dismember her.


    A San Diego County sheriff's detective said in one affidavit that the trio may have targeted Killgore for their "unusual sexual fetishes." Louis Ray Perez and Dorothy Maraglino told authorities they were involved in "master, servant and slave role playing."

    AP Photo/San Diego County Sheriff's Department

    Brittany Dawn Killgore

    The third suspect, Jessica Lopez, said she strangled the victim, fearing the victim would upend a kinky sex ring by seducing her "Master," according to the warrants. Lopez wrote in a seven-page letter that she believed Killgore was trying to come between her, Perez and Maraglino. All three have pleaded not guilty.

    Lopez, who calls Perez her "Master," shoulders full blame for the killing, according to the warrants, saying she acted after the victim told her that she had a "whole night planned" with Perez, comments suggesting jealousy was a motive.

    Lopez, 25, said she had been burned before in a relationship and knew what she had to do when Killgore entered their Fallbrook home. Lopez said she shot the victim with a stun gun, wrapped a rope around a neck, buried her face in a pillow and strangled her.

    "She barely moved but she just wouldn't die, the miserable whore," the letter said.

    Lopez said she made "a few attempts to chop her up" with Perez's power tools and doused Killgore's body in bleach to get rid of evidence before dumping the nude body near Lake Skinner, near Riverside.

    The documents give no indication that Killgore knew about the sex ring, and prosecutors call her an innocent victim. Detectives said she accepted Perez's invitation to a San Diego dinner cruise after Perez helped her move that afternoon. The warrants do not say how Killgore met the suspects.

    Sloan Ostbye, Lopez's attorney, joined the San Diego County district attorney's office in an appeal to keep the documents sealed, calling much of her client's letter "false or at least misleading and possibly delusional."

    In her letter, Lopez told police she wasn't responsible for the killing. Detectives found it in a San Diego hotel where Lopez was discovered with self-inflicted cuts four days after Killgore disappeared.

    The handwritten letter — below a mirror that was scrawled with the word "PIGS READ THIS" — accused police of "complete incompetence." It is laced with profanity and poor punctuation.

    The letter says where the body was dumped, telling police they would likely find handcuff marks on the wrists. It says the handcuffs and a knife were disposed at a beach restroom in Oceanside.

    Three days after Killgore vanished, detectives searched Perez's mud-caked 2001 Ford Explorer and found a plastic bag with a stun gun, latex gloves and Killgore's blood. Perez's DNA was found on the stun gun.

    AP Photo/Lenny Ignelzi

    Jessica Lynn Lopez

    The documents describe an elaborate ruse for Perez to conceal his whereabouts on the night Killgore vanished.

    The Marine told detectives he picked up Killgore for the dinner cruise but instead dropped her off at a downtown San Diego nightclub. He said he couldn't find her at the club after parking and returned home.

    Killgore's and Perez's cell phones remained in Fallbrook that night, contradicting his statement that he was in San Diego, according to authorities.

    Killgore sent a text message to a friend that said, "Help," at 7:50 p.m., about 13 minutes after Perez picked her up. The friend asked if she was OK and insisted she call. About two hours later, the friend got a response, "Yes I love this party," which fueled suspicions because Killgore always texted 'yeah' instead of 'yes' and had said nothing about going to a party.

    A transient found Killgore's phone at his feet when he woke up in the doorway of a downtown San Diego hotel that night. A San Diego County sheriff's detective said he believed Perez drove downtown to get rid of the phone.

    All three defendants are being held on $3 million bail. A preliminary hearing is scheduled Aug. 21.

     

     

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    282 comments

    Execute them all immediately. For once let justice be served to the victim and the family. What a sick bunch of scum.

    Show more
    Explore related topics: san-diego, murder-case, marine-wife, brittany-kilgore
  • 20
    Apr
    2012
    12:04pm, EDT

    Slain Marine wife's blog: Teen depression, worries about getting married, divorced

    AP

    Brittany Dawn Killgore is shown in a photo provided by the San Diego County Sheriff's Department.

    By NBCSanDiego.com

    SAN DIEGO — An online blog posted by slain Marine wife Brittany Killgore when she was just 17 is giving the public more insight on her past.


    Follow @msnbc_us

    The blog is titled 13smyfavoritenumber. Friday, April 13, was the day she was last seen alive. Her nude body was found Tuesday in a small ravine in Riverside County. In court documents, police have said that she had suffered "homicidal violence."

    In her blog, Brittany talked about suffering from depression as a teen but said she stopped taking pills for it after feeling better.

    Brittany Killgore talked about things that concern most teenagers: insecurities, traveling the world and finding true love.


    In fact, she wanted to get married someday and have two kids, but she was also concerned because the divorce rate is so high.

    Read the original story at NBCSanDiego.com

    Early last week before she went missing, the 22-year-old Fallbrook resident filed for divorce from her husband, Marine Cory Killgore.

    Like many teens, she wrote that she didn't get along with her family and but looked forward to going to college.

    She also said she didn't do drugs and channeled all her energy into her artwork.

    New details also emerged about the woman accused of killing Killgore and a man who has been called a person of interest in the case.

    Jessica Lynn Lopez, who is charged with first-degree murder, and Louis Perez, a Camp Pendleton Marine, either lived together or lived at the same residence at different times, according to legal records examined by NBCSanDiego.com.

    On Sunday, 45-year-old Perez, who authorities have said is the last person to be seen with Killgore, was arrested. He is accused of stealing an AR-15 assault rifle and was booked into Las Colinas Detention Facility on $500,000 bail. Perez was questioned regarding Killgore's disappearance, but detectives said he was uncooperative.

    Authorities have not said what, if any, role they suspect Perez of playing in Killgore's disappearance.

    Lopez, 25, was arrested on Tuesday at a Ramada Inn in San Diego. She had self-inflicted injuries, according to Homicide Lt. Larry Nesbit of the San Diego County Sheriff's Department. She went to UCSD Medical Center for "medical necessity" before being booked into Las Colinas.

    Lopez pleaded not guilty in court on Thursday. A judge set bail at $3 million; Lopez's next court appearance will be next Friday.

    San Diego officials announce that murder charges have been filed against Jessica Lynn Lopez, and that two others have been arrested in connection with the death of Brittany Killgore.

    It is unknown if Lopez and Perez lived in the residence at the same time, but housing records show that each of them lived at the same residence at some point.

    A former neighbor of Lopez's told NBC San Diego that Lopez's family still lives in that home.

    Court records reveal two warrants were issued for the arrest of Lopez last year, after she failed to appear in court for traffic citations.

    Those citations give two addresses for Lopez — on Rorex Drive in Escondido, and more recently, on Fallbrook Street in Fallbrook. Killgore and her husband also lived in Fallbrook.

    Lopez has two sisters, one of whom is married to a military man, according to a neighbor. The neighbor said Lopez went to San Pasqual High School and attended a North County community college.

    Lopez's family is represented by Escondido attorney Dean Broyles, who said they are "still reeling" from Lopez's arrest. Broyles is also the Lopez family's neighbor.

    Broyles urged the public to disregard the the rumors and innuendo surrounding Killgore's death, and let the legal system do its job. "Don't rush to judgment until all the facts are out," he said.

    On Thursday, Killgore's father, Darryl Wrest, spoke publicly about his daughter, choking back tears as he read a short statement.

    "I am here to speak for Brittany, as her voice was taken from her,” he said. "Brittany was a beautiful, kind caring young woman trying to find her way in this world."

    Wrest defended his daughter against rumors circulating about her private life.

    "Please leave my daughter in peace, she does not deserve to be the victim of lies and innuendo, any more than she deserves to be murdered," he said adding that Brittany’s family was going to fight for justice for her.

    This article includes reporting by Tony Shin, along with Paul Krueger, Greg Bledsoe and Sarah Griecoof NBCSanDiego.com.

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    44 comments

    Like so many of these MSNBC stories, I have no idea what in the hell is going on here. What were the details under which he was last seen with her? Were there threats? Why is the woman under arrest? Aren't there public charging documents the writer could reference? Anything else?

    Show more
    Explore related topics: crime, featured, marine-wife, brittany-killgore

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