Multimedia
Videos
Journal Photo Galleries/Sales
Reader-Submitted Photo Gallery
Rodeo Legends


Search


Advanced Search

HOME

EVENTS
NEWS
Local News
Journal Denver Bureau
News Announcements
State
High Country News
Around the West
Nation
Pet of the Week
Public Agenda
News Documents
Through The Trees
OPINION
SPORTS
BUSINESS
AGRICULTURE
ARTS & ENTERTAINMENT
EDUCATION
LIVING
HOME & GARDEN
FAITH
OBITUARIES
FOR THE RECORD

ABOUT US

MULTIMEDIA

YOUR COMMENTS

READER POLL RESULTS

YOUR STORY SUGGESTIONS

Archives

CLASSIFIEDS

Journal Jobs

SUBSCRIBE


BUY LOCAL





home : news : news July 30, 2010

9/26/2009 6:00:00 AM Email this articlePrint this article 
+ click to enlarge
Journal/Sam Green
Jeremiah Berry wipes a tear from his eye Friday afternoon at his sentence hearing in the Montezuma County Courthouse. Berry cried throughout the proceeding.
Berry receives 3 years
Man gets prison for killing father who sexually abused him

Steve Grazier
Journal Staff Writer

A Montezuma County man who pleaded guilty to felony counts of manslaughter and menacing after admitting to killing his father and decapitating and dismembering the body was sentenced Friday.

Jeremiah Raymond Berry was sentenced to three years in a Colorado Department of Corrections facility followed by 10 years of "intense supervised" probation. He appeared Friday afternoon before 22nd Judicial District Judge Douglas Walker, who accepted a plea deal reached between the district attorney and Berry's public defender.

"You killed your father, you shot him and you destroyed evidence," Walker said in announcing the sentence. "You were (also) sexually abused by your father ... and have suffered from mental abuse."

In July 2008, Berry pleaded not guilty by reason of insanity after being charged with second-degree murder, a count that was dismissed as part of his plea agreement in August with the district attorney.

Berry, 22, admitted to killing his father, Jack Berry, who was 42. He told Montezuma County sheriff detectives he shot his father in the back of the head after he was raped by the man, then decapitated and dismembered the body and fed flesh to coyotes in February 2008, according to court documents in the case.

According to police reports, sheriff's office detectives found body parts, including a skull, hands and feet, thought to be those of Jack Berry in buckets hardened with cement in a storage room of a Montezuma County dog kennel.

The judge's three-year prison sentence includes credit for 443 days served and was the maximum term recommended under a plea deal reached with prosecutors and the defense. Berry's manslaughter count had a 10-year probation cap following any prison time he might serve.

"Some incarceration is needed. I can't sentence you without (it)," said Walker, who noted that Berry's sentence will begin immediately.

A handful of friends and family members spoke on Jeremiah Berry's behalf during the sentencing proceeding. His mother, Rita Gallegos, said her son was robbed of a normal childhood because of years of physical and sexual abuse from Jack Berry.

"Jeremiah stopped a cycle of abuse. He's not a cold-blooded killer," Gallegos said. "His father was a monster, and Jeremiah was a victim."

One of Berry's sisters, Rebecca Lopez, agreed.

"Our father took (Jeremiah's) strength and ambition ... and his (right) to know he was a man," she said. "Since Jeremiah was born, he has been in prison."

Jeremiah Berry was immediately ordered back into custody of the Montezuma County Sheriff's Office and will soon be transported to a state corrections facility in Denver. However, following Friday's hearing, the judge awarded Berry a few minutes to meet with family members in a private court chamber to say goodbye.

Public defender Chris Trimble, counsel for Jeremiah Berry, called his client's sentence a "just outcome."

"It's sad to see him suffer after a generation of abuse that he was forced to end. Jack Berry was a sadistic monster, and Jeremiah Berry has been a hero," said Trimble, who noted that on numerous occasions, Berry "self mutilated" his body while in jail and made several attempts of suicide.

Two mental evaluations over the course of Berry's case suggested he was competent enough to stand trial; however, Kathy Vetter, a sheriff's department nurse, said he was in serious need of mental health care.

During his remarks to the judge, District Attorney Jim Wilson summed up the plea agreement and potential sentence as a "combined effort" between the defense and prosecution. He said the deal balances the community's needs with those of Jeremiah Berry.

"We need to give him what he needs to be a constructive member of society," Wilson said. "He is a victim just like he is a defendant. He's a troubled young man."

Walker allowed the Cortez Journal to take still photographs of the sentencing hearing under various conditions to not impede the proceeding. Cameras normally aren't allowed during district court proceedings.

Reach Steve Grazier at steveg@cortezjournal.com.



Reader Comments


Posted: Monday, October 05, 2009
Article comment by: Curtis Alan McGee

Three years in the slammer? The kid needs to be celebrated around the world as a hero for three years. He just should have called the cops after he got done dismembering him instead of trying to destroy evidence.

Posted: Friday, October 02, 2009
Article comment by: Kendra

jerry berry should have never had this happen to him anyone who believes that jerry is the monster has obviously never met him. granted he is messed up sometimes and he gets in trouble but thats lust like any other kid down in cortez. he didn't want to do what he did but he had no choice. when people get victimized for so long they begin to not think about a logical way to get out of it, because even if he had gone to the police and they arrested him it doesnt mean that that would stop it. eventually his dad would have gotten out and done it all over again. I believe that jerry did what he had to do to survive and I'm happy the court saw that because to keep him locked up for so long is whats breaking him down the most. Jerry belongs with everyone else not in jail

Posted: Friday, October 02, 2009
Article comment by: BILL ALEXANDER

The kid needed help. A little time in prison is to be expected, but he needs a lot of help while there.

Posted: Thursday, October 01, 2009
Article comment by: Ayny

Why did this young man have to suffer for so many years if the family knew what was going on? why wasn't the Dad reported? and why didn't the family move away from this monster?!

Posted: Thursday, October 01, 2009
Article comment by: Mike Hawk

He does not belong in prison, he belongs in a mental institution. Until it has been evaluated that he is able to live amongst society again...if ever. I would kill my dad if he abused me too. Would I dismember him and feed him to wolves? No. There is a clear difference in the two, which is why this "kid" does not need to go to prison. He is not "normal" due to his childhood.


  - Page 1 -  Page 2

Article Comment Submission Form
Please feel free to submit your comments.

Article comments are not posted immediately to the Web site. Each submission must be approved by the Web site editor, who may edit content for appropriateness. There may be a delay of 24-48 hours for any submission while the web site editor reviews and approves it.

Note: All information on this form is required. Your telephone number is for our use only, and will not be attached to your comment.
Name:
Telephone:
E-mail:
Passcode: This form will not send your comment unless you copy exactly the passcode seen below into the text field. This is an anti-spam device to help reduce the automated email spam coming through this form.

Please copy the passcode exactly
- it is case sensitive.
Message:
   
 Latest Cortez, Colorado, weather









Copyright Cortez Journal. All rights reserved. The Cortez Journal Web edition is published Monday through Saturday for readers in Cortez, Montezuma County and beyond. The Cortez Journal is located at 123 N. Roger Smith Ave. Cortez, and can be reached at (970) 565-8527.
Software © 1998-2010 1up! Software, All Rights Reserved