• Prosecutors still don't know how Nicole Montalvo was killed, despite in

    From Daily Mexican@21:1/5 to All on Wed Jan 26 00:35:52 2022
    XPost: fl.politics, alt.killers.serial, sac.general
    XPost: talk.politics.guns

    <https://www.orlandosentinel.com/resizer/ybk5cPGsd6FmcRIYvthWhci G0Ng=/800x450/top/arc-anglerfish-arc2-prod- tronc.s3.amazonaws.com/public/NE3OFS3CPZBWBNLL3BIJQCRU7Q.jpg>

    Prosecutors say they still don’t know how or when Nicole
    Montalvo was killed, despite having indicted her estranged
    husband last week for murder in the St. Cloud mother’s death.

    The admission comes more than a month after Gov. Ron DeSantis
    reassigned the case away from Orange-Osceola State Attorney
    Aramis Ayala, who argued Osceola Sheriff Russ Gibson had rushed
    to arrest Montalvo’s husband Christopher Otero-Rivera and father-
    in-law Angel Rivera on first-degree murder charges before
    determining who killed and dismembered her in October.

    An attorney for Otero-Rivera, who is now charged with second-
    degree murder, abuse of a dead body and evidence tampering,
    asked prosecutors Sunday to provide details of the alleged
    offense, including a place, date, time and any material facts,
    court records show.

    Ocala-based State Attorney Brad King, who was reassigned the
    case by DeSantis, responded Monday, writing his office could not
    provide specifics.

    “The State of Florida does not know the means or method by which
    the victim was killed because her body was burned, cut into
    pieces and buried on the property listed above and another piece
    of property owned by members of [Otero-Rivera’s] family,” King
    wrote. "Not all of the body was recovered. The Medical Examiner
    has ruled the death a homicide.

    King said the murder happened somewhere on the Rivera family’s
    property on Hixon Avenue in St. Cloud but added the exact date
    of the offense is “unknown.” The 33-year-old went missing Oct.
    21 after dropping off her 8-year-old son at the Riveras’ home.

    “The State can prove that the victim was alive on October 21,
    2019 at approximately 4:00 pm when she was seen on video paying
    her rent at Summer Cove Apartments,” King wrote. “The first
    parts of her body were discovered on Oct. 24, 2019 in the late
    afternoon.”

    The acrimonious dispute between Ayala and Gibson over whether
    there was enough evidence to charge Otero-Rivera and his father
    became public after the Ayala’s office missed a November
    deadline to indict the pair for first-degree murder.

    Gibson called on the governor to remove Ayala from the Montalvo
    case, accusing her of hindering the investigation and blaming
    her reluctance to indict the pair on her opposition to the death
    penalty.

    Ayala hit back, calling Gibson’s accusations “blatant lies” and
    said her office had repeatedly “encouraged and requested”
    additional investigation by the Sheriff’s Office. In a letter to
    DeSantis, Ayala accused Gibson of rushing the investigation into
    Montalvo’s killing to boost his re-election campaign.

    Legal experts told the Orlando Sentinel prosecutors would have
    faced an uphill battle had they indicted Otero-Rivera and Rivera
    for first-degree murder, due to a lack of concrete evidence
    connecting one or both of them to Montalvo’s killing.

    In arresting both men, deputies relied on testimony from Otero-
    Rivera’s brother, Nicholas Rivera, who told investigators that
    he had seen his family members with Montalvo’s bloodied corpse
    in their garage. But a DNA report determined blood found on a
    garage floor at the Riveras’ home did not belong to Montalvo or
    her estranged husband, records show.

    mcordeiro@orlandosentinel.com or 407-420-5774

    <https://www.orlandosentinel.com/news/crime/os-ne-nicole- montalvo-killing-trial-20200310-g55ooaszeragjh5lk6fkeqwzsu-
    story.html>
     

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)