Weymouth

No verdict yet in trial over Weymouth officer, elderly woman killings

On Friday, after long sidebar conversations, recesses and a juror-by-juror questioning session, the judge told the jury she appreciated their patience and was sending them home until Monday

Murder suspect Emanuel Lopes in Norfolk Superior Court in Dedham, Massachusetts, on Friday, July 7, 2023.

The jury deliberating murder charges in the 2018 killings of a police sergeant and an elderly woman in Weymouth, Massachusetts, was sent home Friday without having come to a verdict.

Deliberations in the murder trial of Emanuel Lopes, who is accused of killing Weymouth police Sgt. Michael Chesna and 77-year-old Vera Adams, began over a week ago, but the jury had to re-start deliberations on Wednesday after an alternate juror replaced a person who was dismissed because of a conflict with vacation plans.

Judge Beverly Cannone explained to the panel at the time that they were considered a new jury after the change.

On Friday, after long sidebar conversations, recesses and a juror-by-juror questioning session, Cannone told the jury she appreciated their patience and was sending them home until Monday.

"All things considered, it doesn't make any sense to deliberate today, so I am going to send you all home," Cannone said.

Jurors are deliberating the case against Emanuel Lopes, who is accused of the murders of Weymouth Police Officer Michael Chesna and resident Vera Adams.

The three-week trial took place in Norfolk Superior Court in Dedham, although the jury was selected from a pool of residents from Worcester County, requiring them to be bused in each day.

The jury is tasked with deciding whether Lopes should be held responsible for the killings — his attorney argued his history of mental illness caused him to act irrationally.

"It isn't surprising the jury is struggling with that a little bit, especially in view of– you get conflicting scientific and psychiatric evidence on that issue with respect to the defendant's abilities and cognitive knowledge of his actions ,so there is some room for jurors to have a sometimes-heated debate about whether they believe the defendant is guilty legally when the insanity defense is raised," NBC10 Boston legal analyst Michael Coyne said Wednesday.

Lopes faces a sentence life in prison if he's convicted. If he's found not guilty by reason of insanity, he could be sent to a mental health facility.

Jury selection lasted more than a week, but finally the trial for Emanuel Lopes is set to begin with opening statements Thursday morning.

Lopes is accused of attacking 42-year-old Chesna with a rock while being arrested for driving erratically and vandalizing a home. Prosecutors said that during a struggle with the police sergeant, Lopes took Chesna's gun and shot him eight times in the chest and head. Lopes is then accused of shooting Adams, who was nearby in her home's sunroom.

During the course of the trial, jurors were taken to the neighborhood in Weymouth where the fatal shootings occurred and instructed to examine the locations referenced throughout the trial. These include the Queen Anne’s Gate Apartments in Weymouth where Lopes is accused of taking his then girlfriend’s white BMW, the intersection of Main Street and Columbian Street where he allegedly crashed into another vehicle, and Burton Terrace, where the shootings happened.

Witnesses also described during the trial the moments their paths crossed with the driver of a white BMW on the morning of July 15, 2018.

Lopes' ex-girlfriend, Mary Cronin, also testified during the trial, talking about their tumultuous relationship, plagued with concerns about his alleged infidelity and instability. At times she said she would buy him clothes, food, a cell phone, drive him to interviews and work, and let him sleep in her car.

A man charged with the murders of a police officer and an innocent woman appeared in court Thursday.

“I noticed he was a lot more upset and angry when he was dealing with the struggles of homelessness,” said Cronin in response to questions from Tipton about his alleged history of mental illness.

She confirmed earlier testimony that Lopes talked about conspiracies, such as people in the government were Martians and that history was written wrong and needed to be re-written. Starting around July of 2018, she said he was experiencing more and more symptoms and seemed to be getting worse.

When they got back together in the summer of 2018, she said Lopes was upset when she told him that she slept with a former friend. That was the man who called Lopes hours before the shooting that claimed the lives of Chesna and Adams.

The Associated Press contributed to this report.

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