Boston

No Death Penalty for Man Accused of Kidnapping, Killing Jassy Correia

Federal prosecutors didn't give a reason for why they are not seeking the death penalty in Jassy Correia's killing; an attorney for Louis Coleman said he was "pleased" with the decision

Man_Charged_in_Jassy_Correia_s_Death_Appears_in_Court.jpg

A Rhode Island man charged with abducting and killing a woman who had been celebrating her 23rd birthday at a Boston nightclub will not face the death penalty, federal prosecutors said Thursday.

Louis Coleman III, 35, has pleaded not guilty to a charge of kidnapping resulting in death in connection with the February 2019 death of Jassy Correia, a Boston mother of a young girl.

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Coleman kidnapped Correia outside the nightclub, authorities said. Police said he was later captured on surveillance video in the early morning carrying her limp body into his Providence apartment.

Coleman was stopped on Interstate 95 in Delaware four days later with Correia's body in the trunk. Authorities said she died from strangulation and blunt force trauma.

Attorneys on both sides of the case of a man accused of killing 23-year-old Jassy Correia will return to court.

"The United States hereby provides notice that it will not seek the death penalty against defendant Louis Coleman," said Thursday's brief filing from acting U.S. Attorney Nathaniel R. Mendell's office.

No reason was given.

An attorney for Coleman said he was "pleased" with the decision.

"The defense team has felt from the outset that this case was not appropriate for a capital prosecution," David Hoose wrote in a statement. "Mr. Coleman now looks forward to focusing on his trial which is scheduled at the end of February."

Coleman, who is being held without bail, is due back in court on Nov. 12.

The man indicted for the kidnapping death of 23-year-old Jassy Correia pleaded not guilty at his arraignment in federal court in Boston Tuesday morning.
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