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		Ex-classmate convicted of murdering long-missing California student 
		Kristin Smart
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		 [October 19, 2022]  
		By Steve Gorman 
 (Reuters) -A former classmate of Kristin 
		Smart, the California college freshman whose 1996 disappearance had long 
		been one of the state's most sensational unsolved crimes, was found 
		guilty on Tuesday of first-degree murder for her death.
 
 The guilty verdict against Paul Flores, 45, was returned by a 12-member 
		jury in Monterey County Superior Court at the end of a three-month 
		trial. He was arrested and charged with Smart's death in April last 
		year.
 
 Flores faces a maximum penalty of 25 years to life in prison when 
		sentenced on Dec. 9.
 
 "Today, justice delayed is not justice denied," San Luis Obispo County 
		District Attorney Dan Dow told a news conference.
 
 A separate jury acquitted the defendant's father, Ruben Flores, 81, 
		accused of helping to hide Smart's body, of being an accessory to murder 
		after the fact.
 
 Smart, who was 19 when she went missing, was last seen walking to her 
		dormitory on the campus of California Polytechnic State University in 
		San Luis Obispo, about 150 miles (240 km) northwest of Los Angeles, at 
		about 2 a.m. on May 25, 1996. She was returning from an off-campus 
		party.
 
		
		 
		Prosecutors alleged Paul Flores killed her during a rape or attempted 
		rape. Her remains have never been recovered although investigators have 
		said they searched 18 locations for her body.
 Flores, long the main suspect in her disappearance, had told 
		investigators he had left the same gathering with Smart but parted 
		company from her about a block from her dorm.
 
 Prosecutors and Sheriff Ian Parkinson both credited a 10-part 
		documentary podcast, "Your Own Backyard," launched by freelance 
		journalist Chris Lambert in 2019 with unearthing new evidence and 
		witnesses that helped investigators crack the case.
 
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            An undated handout image of missing 
			college student Kristin Smart. Office of the Attorney General of 
			California/Handout via REUTERS/File Photo 
            
			
			
			 
            Delays in the investigation of the case prompted state lawmakers to 
			pass legislation requiring colleges and universities to share 
			information more quickly about missing students with off-campus 
			police.
 According to a courtroom account published by the San Luis Obispo 
			Tribune newspaper, Paul Flores flinched as the guilty verdict was 
			read. The victim's father, Stan Smart, reacted with a smile and put 
			his around her mother, Denise Smart, who was in tears.
 
 Defense lawyer Robert Sanger told The Tribune afterward that "the 
			case is still pending," but declined further comment. During his 
			summation to jurors, Sanger asserted there was "no evidence of a 
			murder."
 
 The trial was moved from San Luis Obispo County in a change of venue 
			requested by defense lawyers because of intense pretrial publicity 
			surrounding the investigation.
 
 Sheriff Parkinson vowed that the case would remain open until the 
			victim's remains are found and returned to her family.
 
 Stan Smart, speaking to reporters following the trial, expressed his 
			appreciation of the outcome but added, "Without Kristin, there is no 
			joy or happiness in this verdict."
 
 (Reporting by Steve Gorman in Los Angeles; Editing by Lincoln Feast 
			and Edwina Gibbs)
 
            
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