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California Officer's Killer Sentenced to Life Term


Posted: Friday, July 25, 2008
Updated: July 25th, 2008 11:03 AM GMT-05:00

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Henry K. Lee, Chronicle Staff Writer
The San Francisco Chronicle (California)

A 20-year-old man convicted of murdering a Pittsburg police officer railed against police brutality and his mother pleaded for leniency before he was sentenced Thursday to life in prison without the possibility of parole.

Andrew Moffett apologized to the court and the family of slain Officer Larry Lasater after launching into an attack on the justice system and shootings by police officers in Pittsburg and New York, saying it was unfair that police had been exonerated in those cases.

"This is not an admission to nothing," Moffett said. "This is a speech to open up the public's eyes, because it seems like they're sleeping."

Lasater's family blasted Moffett, saying his statements rang hollow because he has never shown any remorse for his actions after an April 2005 bank robbery that led to Lasater's shooting death. A second defendant, Alexander Hamilton, was sentenced to death last year for firing the shots that killed the former Marine Corps captain.

"You've really taken no responsibility," Lasater's widow, Jo Ann Lasater, said in Contra Costa County Superior Court in Richmond. "You may have not fired the shots, but your actions that day led to my husband's death."

The couple's son, Cody, was born two months after the officer was killed. "He doesn't understand why he can't touch his father," Jo Ann Lasater said. "Because of your sense of entitlement, my son's life is not what it should be."

Phyllis Loya said the bullets that killed her son also killed "a part of everyone who loved him."

Moffett's mother, Felicia Boissiere, 40, told Judge Laurel Brady that her son deserved a second chance because he wasn't the one who fired the shots.

"It is wrong to send my son to prison for the rest of his life for a murder he did not commit," Boissiere said as Lasater's relatives shook their heads. "It's immoral and it's unconstitutional."

She added, "Andrew is better than the people he connected with. He just got misguided."

Moffett was convicted of murder and other crimes but was not eligible for the death penalty because he was 17 when Lasater was killed.

Under the law, Brady could have sentenced Moffett to 25 years to life in prison. But prosecutor Harold Jewett said Moffett hadn't earned any mercy from the judge. "We do ask this court to throw away the key," Jewett said.

The judge ordered Moffett to spend the rest of his life behind bars, saying the actions he took "were of a very adult nature."

Lasater had been with the Pittsburg Police Department three years when he was shot to death April 23, 2005, as he chased Hamilton and Moffett. The men had just robbed a Wells Fargo branch in a Raley's supermarket in Pittsburg.

The two crashed a stolen getaway car and hid along the Delta de Anza Regional Trail. Lasater came across Moffett in a field but didn't see Hamilton, who was armed with a 9mm Glock semiautomatic pistol and was lying in the brush.

Hamilton ambushed the officer and fired four shots, with the first striking Lasater in the neck. Police arrested Hamilton and recovered his Glock a short time later, and Moffett was found hiding nearby.

Lasater, who attended College Park High School in Pleasant Hill, commanded tanks in the Marine Corps before he became a police officer.

He was declared brain-dead the day after the shooting but was kept on life support so his organs could be donated. Lasater's heart was donated to Lloyd Burton, a retired Redding contractor.

"You've really taken no responsibility. You may have not fired the shots, but your actions that day led to my husband's death."

Jo Ann Lasater widow of slain Officer Larry Lasater



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Comments

Posted by Martin Moreno in Tucson, AZ
(07/25/08 - 12:25 PM)
California Officer's Killer Sentence
Violent crimes that culminate in the death of police officers mandate the maximum penalty allowed by law. This case not only illustrates the inherent dangers of the law enforcement profession but it also highlights how the death of a good man negatively impacts the innocent, Officer Lasater's family. Mrs. Lasater, I offer you my condolences and prayers. May God keep you strong and assuage the trajedy of your loss.

As for the pleas for mercy by the killer's mother, coupled with the killer's laying the blame on law enforcement's alleged brutality, your statements demonstrate an inability to accept responsibility. You blame everyone other than yourselves. To the killer's mother, your statement to the court that your son was misguided I ask you, where were you to guide your son and keep him from committing such heinous acts? Stop making excuses and accept responsibility for your actions! Your son failed society and you failed your son.



Posted by coplover
(07/25/08 - 01:16 PM)
Martin Moreno, amen to your comments. My prayers to all the law enforcement officers in this country. Thank you for keeping us safe!!!!



Posted by cg836
(07/25/08 - 02:15 PM)
i agree with Martin Moreno. It is utterly stupid to have campus cops remain unarmed.



Posted by ghettocop
(07/25/08 - 02:56 PM)
Poor misguided child my A**, he knew what he was getting into... And based on the mother's comments, she is liable too. Lock her up!!!

Murder is immoral and unconstitutional, the felony murder rule has been tried before the Supreme Court and remains standing!

God Bless Officer Lasater's family and I pray that one day Cody can come to understand the true nature of the warrior his father was. SEMPER FI!!



Posted by Fred Smith in Pleasant Hill, CA
(07/25/08 - 04:45 PM)
Lasater Verdict
I am amazed when a person is convicted in the State of California, the outcry, the excuses. To the mother of the convict, at least you will be able to see your son, alive. You should look inside you, you helpeed form his choices in life. It is all about choices. Moffett had choices, he did not have to commit a robbery and be associated with someone who ambushed a police officer. He heart goes out to the lassater family as well as the law enforcement community. There are a hand full of men and women who put their lives on the line so someone like Moffett can whine and complain about what someone is not doing for him. Yes, I have been on the job for 30 years and I have attened too many police funerals, it cops shots and kills someone, even after facts are in, the press and the public think their actions were brutal, a 17 yr old punk kills and cop or participates in the action was misguided, I don't think so.
Gob Bless the Lassater family and their extended law enforcement family.



Posted by vrodgirl in Prunedale, California (near Soledad)
(07/25/08 - 10:06 PM)
Lasater Verdict
It is people like this criminal's mother that give all of us job security. If I had even thought of participating in a crime of this nature my father would have kicked my a** from here to hell and back. But this mother finds excuses for her son! As a retired California State Correctional Officer I can tell you that she is the rule rather than the exception (unfortunately). Everyone is a victim these days and their kids have every reason in the world to do the things they've done. I am very glad the law reads that those involved are just as guilty as those that pulled the trigger, otherwise these idiots would be out there doing it again, and again, and again. Lock them up and throw away the key! I didn't mind dealing with them one bit, I got to go home every night.



Posted by john cabeza in new jersey
(07/29/08 - 03:03 PM)
anger
lets hope they deal with those animals in state.


semper fi brother. Your guarding the gates of heaven with my other brothers.








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