Another lawyer for Paul Kovacich? You bet!
Written by Joe Carroll   
Tuesday, 30 October 2007

Guess what! Paul Kovacich, the pensioned Placer County sheriff’s sergeant accused of killing his wife a quarter century ago, is getting a new lawyer.

During an appearance before Superior Court Judge Larry Gaddis in Auburn last week, it appeared that John Lyman, a deputy public defender, will be the next attorney to represent Kovacich, who remains free on $1.5 million bail.

The judge was informed that Kovacich’s most recent ex-lawyer, John Spurling, had left the public defender’s staff. Spurling was appointed to represent Kovacich a few months ago after Tom Leupp and Clyde Blackmon, the ex-cop’s private lawyers, said they were leaving the case because their client could no longer afford to pay them.

Gaddis said he wants to know ASAP if Lyman or someone else will be handling Kovacich’s defense. He set December 19 to consider all motions in the case, including an anticipated one for a change of venue for Kovacich’s trial, which is tentatively set to start next March.

It is expected Kovacich’s attorney will claim that extensive news coverage of the case, especially since Kovacich’s arrest on a grand jury indictment in September of 2006, will prevent him from receiving an unbiased jury trial in Placer and nearby counties.

A gag order issued by the court soon after Kovacich’s arrest last year prohibits anyone connected with the case from talking publicly about it.

Janet Kovacich was a 27-year-old mother of two young children in September of 2002 when she disappeared from her Skyridge area home in Auburn. Auburn police investigators claim that Kovacich shot her in the head and sunk her body in Rollins Lake, a reservoir on the Bear River northeast of Colfax.

Investigators also claim that a piece of skull with what appears to be a bullet hole in it was washed ashore at the lake in the mid-1990s. They claim, too, that DNA testing conducted by the California Department of Justice showed the piece of skull came from the missing Janet Kovacich.

Kovacich has pleaded not guilty to the murder charge. His children, now adults, helped arrange for his freedom on bail.

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