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Chester Weger hearing: The lab found DNA in the Starved Rock Murders. It’s not his.

Evidence from the Starved Rock murders went to the lab and one of them — a glove worn by victim Frances Murphy — bore a hair. It was a man’s hair and the lab retrieved DNA.

It wasn’t Chester Weger’s.

Monday, Weger attorney Andy Hale disclosed in La Salle County Circuit Court the DNA corroborates their belief Weger is blameless in the three murders — “In our opinion this evidence exonerates him” — though they still would like to identify the man whose hair was found on Murphy’s glove.

“We still want closure for the families — for everybody,” Hale said.

Fellow Weger attorney Celeste Stack advised Judge Michael C. Jansz the lab findings are solid, though not yet final.

“We’re just waiting to see what the final results are,” Stack said, “although I’ve never heard of a case where they’ve changed their minds.”

Special prosecutor Colleen Griffin said she’d like to see an official report before going further. Jansz scheduled an Oct. 28 follow-up hearing, at which time he might approve the submission of the hair DNA to be crosschecked against the Combined DNA Index System (CODIS) to see if they can identify the source of the hair.

Weger did not speak during the 10-minute hearing. Outside the Ottawa courtroom, he expressed delight with the lab findings.

“It’s wonderful,” Weger said from his wheelchair, his mask removed by family members. “It’s really wonderful.”

Chester Weger exits the La Salle County courthouse in Ottawa after a Monday, Aug. 1, 2022, hearing. One of the victim’s gloves from the 1960 Starved Rock murders had a hair attached to it, and the hair was a man's, but it was not Weger's.Judge Michael C. Jansz speaks during a hearing Monday, Aug. 1, 2022, regarding DNA results in the Starved Rock Murders case. A hair tested on the glove found the DNA of a man, but it did not match Chester Weger's.Chester Weger's attorney Andy Hale speaks Monday, Aug. 1, 2022, inside the courtroom at the La Salle County Government Complex in Ottawa.Chester Weger speaks Monday, Aug. 1, 2022, just outside the La Salle County Governmental Complex in Ottawa after his attorney told the courtroom DNA from a hair found on one of the victim's in the Starved Rock Murders was returned, but it was not Weger's.Chester Weger, his family and his attorney Andy Hale speak outside the La Salle County Government Complex in Ottawa on Monday, Aug. 1, 2022.Chester Weger speaks Monday, Aug. 1, 2022, after his hearing at the La Salle County Government Complex in Ottawa.Chester Weger, his family and his attorney Andy Hale speak outside the La Salle County Government Complex in Ottawa on Monday, Aug. 1, 2022.Chester Weger is brought into the courtroom for his hearing Monday, Aug. 1, 2022, at the La Salle County Government Complex in Ottawa.Chester Weger and his attorney Andy Hale speak outside the La Salle County Government Complex in Ottawa on Monday, Aug. 1, 2022.Chester Weger and his attorney Andy Hale speak outside the La Salle County Government Complex in Ottawa on Monday, Aug. 1, 2022.

Weger, 83, who was paroled in 2019 after serving six decades in prison, remains convicted of murder — for now. Hale and Stack said they planned to meet with the special prosecutor, based out of the Will County State’s Attorney’s Office, and make their case for vacating Weger’s conviction.

“We’re not done yet,” Hale said. “We’ll be done when the conviction is vacated.”

During his press conference, Hale acknowledged the presence of another’s DNA doesn’t automatically show Weger wasn’t at the crime scene. Nevertheless, Hale said the discovery flies in the face of the long-held proposition Weger acted on his own.

“The Chester Weger story is, ‘He’s by himself and he commits the murders,’” Hale said. “Now, we’re saying, ‘Oh, it was another guy who killed them, but Chester was there?’ Now, we’re moving the goal posts. That’s not the state’s case.”

The material recovered was “nuclear DNA,” that is, retrieved from the nucleus or core of the atom. That’s notable, Stack said, because bacteria is known to break down the nucleus and render the DNA unreadable.

Stack said while “not a shock” that nuclear DNA was retrieved from 62-year-old evidence — hair is more resilient and less likely to break down — “it’s very difficult to get nuclear DNA. So that’s step one, and we’re very happy to get a full profile that can go into CODIS.”

Source: The Daily Chronicle

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