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NJ jurors convict Fla. man in 'fat defense' trial
By DAVID PORTER (AP) � 17 hours ago

HACKENSACK, N.J. � A jury convicted a Florida man Friday of murdering his
former son-in-law, rejecting the man's defense that he was too fat to have
run up and down a flight of stairs to commit the crime and make a quick
getaway.

Edward Ates looked down and shook his head in court as he was found guilty
of murder and weapons counts for killing Paul Duncsak, who was shot six
times at his home in Ramsey, about 25 miles northwest of New York.

Ates' "too fat to kill" defense provided an angle to the trial that
attracted attention from the news media but didn't sway the jury of eight
women and four men, who reached a verdict on their second day of
deliberations after a six-week trial.

Some of Duncsak's family members cried softly after the verdict was read.
Ate's wife, Dottie, sobbed in the gallery as he was handcuffed and led away
by court deputies.

"It doesn't bring him back, but at least he won't get away with it," said
Duncsak's sister-in-law, Barbara Duncsak. "It's satisfying. It was a long
time coming."

Ates had argued he didn't have the energy to accurately shoot Duncsak from
a perch on the staircase at Duncsak's home in August 2006. He was 62 years
old, 5-feet-8 and 285 pounds at the time of the murder.

Assistant Bergen County Prosecutor Wayne Mello termed Ates' defense
"nonsense" and credited dogged work by investigators, particularly Det.
Sgt. Russ Christiana, that built a circumstantial case around cell phone
records and computer forensics.

"This was a complicated case, and it was good old-fashioned police work
combined with new technology," Mello said.

Prosecutors contended Ates drove from Florida to New Jersey, climbed a
staircase and shot the 40-year-old Duncsak, a pharmaceutical executive who
was embroiled in a bitter custody dispute with Ates' daughter after their
divorce.

Ates then drove 21 hours to his mother's house in Louisiana, prosecutors
said. The last evidence the jurors reviewed in court on Friday was
videotaped testimony from Ates' sister in which she admitted that she lied
to authorities about when he arrived in Louisiana, per his request.

Brenda Ates has already pleaded guilty to hindering prosecution and is not
expected to get prison time when she is sentenced, Bergen County Prosecutor
John Molinelli said Friday. Molinelli is proceeding with hindering charges
against Ates' wife and mother.

Prosecutors presented evidence at trial to show Ates bought books detailing
how to build a gun silencer, did Internet searches on how to pick locks and
how to commit the perfect murder.

Ates, meanwhile, testified at the trial that he often needed to take breaks
while driving, implying that he wasn't capable of making the drive to
Louisiana.

In addition, Ates' doctor testified that bounding up the stairs, as the
killer was thought to have done, would have caused Ates to become short of
breath and shake, making it difficult to keep his wrist straight enough to
accurately fire a gun at someone from a distance.

Duncsak's mother, Sophia, has said Ates became vengeful toward her son
after Paul Duncsak refused to give Ates money to keep Ates' struggling golf
course in Okeechobee, Fla., afloat.

State Superior Court Judge Harry G. Carroll set sentencing for Dec. 17 and
revoked Ates' bail.