CLICK TO SUPPORT OUR SPONSORS

Starbulletin.com




Man’s minimum term
set at 150 years

Jason Santos was convicted of
a 1994 murder and robbery


Associated Press

HILO >> The Hawaii Paroling Authority has set a minimum prison term of 150 years for a man convicted of a 1994 murder and robbery on the Big Island.

Jason Santos, 30, was convicted last June of the death of rodeo horse dealer Vernon Souza Jr. of Kauai. Circuit Judge Riki May Amano sentenced Santos in August to two life terms.

Souza's badly burned body was found in a section of charred brush off Saddle Road on Sept. 30, 1994. Prosecutors said he died of blows to the head and a cut throat in a cocaine deal that turned violent.

Santos' alleged accomplice, Oliver White, was found mentally unfit to stand trial because of brain damage suffered in a traffic accident a month after the murder.

A grand jury indicted Santos and White in 2000. At the time, Santos was living in Nevada, and White was residing in North Dakota.

Although his "max-out date would be 2150," the board will review Santos' case in 20 years, said Tommy Johnson, administrator of the Hawaii Paroling Authority.

Amano passed sentence after Deputy Prosecutor Jack Matsukawa asked the judge to extend the 20-year robbery term to life with the possibility of parole and to tack that onto an identical term for the murder.

"This is the most serious kind of person next to a serial killer," Matsukawa had said. "It was premeditated, and he did it for the money. ... This kind of person should not be walking the streets."

Souza, 30, a noted rodeo performer and horse trader, was killed shortly after he arrived at the Hilo airport. Prosecutors said Santos slit Souza's throat while he was still in the car and stabbed and beat him. The car was doused with gasoline and set on fire.

During his trial, Santos blamed White for the killing, saying he was only along for the ride, but admitted to helping to drag Souza's body out of the car before it was burned.

The judge called Santos' crime "premeditated, planned, cold, calculating."

Even if one were to accept Santos' version of what happened, she said, "I find it inexplicable that he shows no remorse of his complicity in burning the body."



E-mail to City Desk

BACK TO TOP


Text Site Directory:
[News] [Business] [Features] [Sports] [Editorial] [Do It Electric!]
[Classified Ads] [Search] [Subscribe] [Info] [Letter to Editor]
[Feedback]



© 2002 Honolulu Star-Bulletin
https://archives.starbulletin.com