BOISE, Idaho — A federal judge has cleared the way for serial killer Joseph Duncan’s execution for the 2005 kidnapping, torture and murder of a 9-year-old North Idaho boy, ruling that Duncan was mentally competent when he gave up the right to appeal his death sentence.
There still could be further appeals, but U.S. District Judge Edward Lodge’s ruling Friday is a key step toward execution for Duncan, who’s been sentenced to death three times over and has been linked to the murder of children and adults. Lodge wrote in his 66-page ruling that he’s “presided over numerous competency hearings in my 50 years on the bench. While these decisions many times are difficult and hard to make because of the consequences that follow, the Court is firmly convinced that the conclusions stated in this order are correct.”
Duncan pleaded guilty to all charges for his murderous 2005 attack on the Groene family at their Wolf Lodge Bay home, where he killed three family members with a hammer and kidnapped the family’s two youngest children. He then took the youngsters to a remote Montana campsite, where he tortured and molested them, before killing the boy, Dylan Groene. Only Dylan’s then-8-year-old sister, Shasta, survived the attack.
At his capital sentencing trial in 2008, Duncan jettisoned his court-appointed defense attorneys and represented himself, prompting them to protest that he was mentally incompetent. Lodge ordered two extensive competency evaluations, holding up the sentencing trial for months, before ruling Duncan competent and letting it proceed. An Idaho jury handed down three death sentences for kidnapping, murder and torture. Duncan also received nine life sentences for his crimes.