Moses J. Lopez |
Court records revealed that convicted trans-identified killer Moses J. Lopez, 30, may have misled the judge before his sentencing for the murder of Portland Radio Cab driver Reese Lawhon. The alleged fabrication resulted in Lopez being offered a sweetheart plea deal by Multnomah County District Attorney Mike Schmidt's Office.
Lopez was sentenced to 22 years in prison on Feb. 21 after pleading guilty to first-degree manslaughter and one count of unlawful use of a weapon over the brutal stabbing death of cab driver Reese Lawhon in 2023. Lopez was riding as a passenger in the back seat when Lopez stabbed Lawhon in the neck in an uprovoked attack with a pair of brass-style knuckles that had an attached blade, court documents show.
Lopez pleaded guilty to manslaughter in exchange for the murder charge being dropped. Multnomah County Judge Heidi Moawad accepted the plea agreement despite the heinous killing and Lopez famously showing no remorse during trial.
During court testimony, Lopez cast blame for the killing and alleged to the judge that they had dialed 911 and requested to be taken to an emergency room and had been suffering from a mental health crisis.
"I refuse to apologize for the lack of help I so desperately needed and called and asked for from 911 services," Lopez told Judge Moawad.
A communication records request obtained by KATU from the Bureau of Emergency Communications revealed that no such requests had been made to the dispatcher during the phone call that night.
The dispatcher transcript is as follows:
Lopez: "I’m sorry; I'm not feeling safe right now. I just want to go home.""I could have used one of you to come help me back then. Otherwise, I wouldn't be here now, and Reese would be with his family," claimed Lopez.
Dispatcher: "Ok. Why aren’t you feeling safe?"
Lopez: "Because I just I’m just not feeling safe right now. Can someone pick me up please and take me home?"
Dispatcher: "Ok. So, we don’t give rides home. You’ll have to call like an Uber or a Lyft or a taxi or something like that."
(Car honks)
Lopez: "Ohhh."
(Car honks)
Dispatcher: "Are you able to call a taxi?"
The call abruptly ended after that question and there was no mention of mental health concerns or a transportation request to the emergency room.
Judge Moawad approved the plea agreement despite the testimony and gave Lopez a maximum term of 22 years in jail. Lopez may be eligible for release significantly sooner because more than half of the sentence is eligible for a sentence reduction.
As Stacy McCain is wont to say, crazy people are dangerous.
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