Mike
Well-known member
Wife cleared in slay
after butt insult
A Brooklyn newlywed who claimed beatings caused her to snap and stab her husband to death after he complained about the size of her butt was acquitted yesterday of manslaughter.
Judy Castillo-Thomas, 29, burst into tears when she heard a judge say there wasn't enough evidence to convict her in theMay 11, 2003, death of Jason Thomas, 27, her husband of only three weeks.
"There's just not enough evidence to convict her of anything," Brooklyn Supreme Court Justice Matthew D'Emic said after Castillo-Thomas, her 7-year-old son and her mother testified about the couple's violent two-year relationship.
The dead man's family wept outside the courtroom following the conclusion of the two-week bench trial.
Castillo-Thomas testified that the pair long had a stormy relationship - charging Thomas choked her so hard that sometimes she would pass out. On May 11, she said, her husband attacked her as she was on the computer, hours after an earlier fight in their Cypress Hills home.
The beating was accompanied by taunts that she was "too skinny" and her buttocks were "too small," she said. She said she grabbed a knife and tried to escape, but he trapped her at the door, lunging at her. "All of a sudden, the knife got short," Castillo-Thomas testified.
Prosecutors argued the blade wound was no accident because it penetrated 6 inches deep in a downward motion.
Nancie L. Katz
Originally published on July 12, 2005
after butt insult
A Brooklyn newlywed who claimed beatings caused her to snap and stab her husband to death after he complained about the size of her butt was acquitted yesterday of manslaughter.
Judy Castillo-Thomas, 29, burst into tears when she heard a judge say there wasn't enough evidence to convict her in theMay 11, 2003, death of Jason Thomas, 27, her husband of only three weeks.
"There's just not enough evidence to convict her of anything," Brooklyn Supreme Court Justice Matthew D'Emic said after Castillo-Thomas, her 7-year-old son and her mother testified about the couple's violent two-year relationship.
The dead man's family wept outside the courtroom following the conclusion of the two-week bench trial.
Castillo-Thomas testified that the pair long had a stormy relationship - charging Thomas choked her so hard that sometimes she would pass out. On May 11, she said, her husband attacked her as she was on the computer, hours after an earlier fight in their Cypress Hills home.
The beating was accompanied by taunts that she was "too skinny" and her buttocks were "too small," she said. She said she grabbed a knife and tried to escape, but he trapped her at the door, lunging at her. "All of a sudden, the knife got short," Castillo-Thomas testified.
Prosecutors argued the blade wound was no accident because it penetrated 6 inches deep in a downward motion.
Nancie L. Katz
Originally published on July 12, 2005