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"I will never forget the image of Susan Jordan lying there in the orange grove ... looking so helpless," said retired police Sgt. Benjamin Reiser, who was the lead investigator on the case. He recalled Susan gripping the rubber tip of a spark plug cable between her thumb and forefinger. Detectives thought Brown tried to strangle her with the cable but found it too short, so used her shoelace instead. Somehow, she'd held on to the end of the cable. "It was almost as if she was telling us whoever did this worked for an auto dealer," Reiser said. Brown was employed cleaning cars at a dealer. Investigators later found shoes at Brown's house matching footprints at the scene, as well as Susan's school books, news clippings about the murder and a phone book turned to the Jordans' listing. Brown had been released from state prison four months before the killing after serving time for the 1978 rape of a 14-year-old girl. Like Susan, the victim in that case had dark hair and eyes. "He seemed to be drawn to that type of female," Reiser said. Susan's older brother, Brian Jordan, has blamed himself for the death because his sister had asked him for a ride to school but he said no. "His life has been in a downward spiral ever since," James Jordan wrote. Repeated phone calls and e-mail messages left with Susan's mother and siblings were not returned. Calls to Brown's lawyers, who were working on last-minute legal moves, also went unreturned. James Clark, the death penalty policy coordinator for the American Civil Liberties Union of Southern California, said the case demonstrates why capital punishment should be scrapped for life in prison without the possibility of parole. He argued that if a family knows a killer is sentenced to life, the limbo of waiting for a death sentence to be carried out is eliminated. "If Mr. Brown had been sentenced to life without parole, this ordeal would have ended 28 years ago," when Brown was sentenced, Clark said. "The entire death sentence process is painful for victims' families and this legal chaos just makes it worse." Hudson Joel Brown, who is married to Susan's younger sister Karen, said relatives wanted the death sentence. "The family hasn't found solace in the knowledge that their loved one's murderer has spent 30 years watching television, exercising, receiving three meals per day plus free medical care while filing a never-ending flood of appeals," he wrote in a letter. "Albert Brown has received a merciful life sentence instead of the death that he deserves." Rod Pacheco, the district attorney for Riverside County, has been working hard to ensure Brown is executed. He filed a 25-page petition with Schwarzenegger outlining why Brown's sentence should be carried out. "Evil does exist in this world, and he is it," Pacheco said in an interview. "He has shown no remorse whatsoever."
[Associated
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