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State to drop charges in Craigslist slaying

Because of his death, authorities must terminate the case against Philip Markoff, accused of killing Julissa Brisman last year. Because of his death, authorities must terminate the case against Philip Markoff, accused of killing Julissa Brisman last year.
By Denise Lavoie
Associated Press / September 16, 2010

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Prosecutors will formally drop their case against a man who committed suicide while awaiting trial on charges of killing a masseuse he met through Craigslist. On the same day, the slain woman will be honored with a remembrance stone in a garden memorializing homicide victims.

Because of his death, authorities must drop the charges against Philip Markoff, the former Boston University medical student who was accused of killing Julissa Brisman last year. Prosecutors plan to file the notice today in Suffolk Superior Court.

Later, Brisman, of New York City, will be honored during an annual rededication ceremony at Boston’s Garden of Peace, a memorial for nearly 700 homicide victims. The focal point of the garden near the Massachusetts State House is a dry streambed containing smooth river stones engraved with victims’ names.

Brisman’s stone, along with those for 34 other victims, will be added. Her mother and other family members are expected to attend.

Brisman, 25, was beaten with a gun and shot three times at a Boston hotel. She was one of three women Markoff was accused of robbing or attacking after meeting them through Craigslist.

Markoff, 24, was found dead last month in his cell at Boston’s Nashua Street Jail. Authorities said he made a scalpel from a pen and a piece of metal; inflicted wounds in his neck, arms, wrists, and ankles; cut his carotid artery; and covered his head with a plastic bag.

Jake Wark, a spokesman for Suffolk District Attorney Daniel F. Conley, said prosecutors will file a notice that the case against a defendant is being dropped.

“The defendant’s death leaves us unable to continue prosecution in this case,’’ Wark said. “A formal notice to the court must be filed when we terminate prosecution short of trial.’’

Prosecutors will get a chance at a later date to release to the public the evidence they had against Markoff, Wark said.

The memorial where Brisman’s stone will be placed opened in 2004. The homicide victims honored in the garden range from babies to the elderly.

“What we hear from some families is that going to the cemetery can be very isolating and hard, but coming to the garden is a place where they feel they are surrounded or connected to other people who can really relate to what they’ve experienced,’’ said Toni Troop, chairwoman of the garden’s board of directors.

“We’re humbled that they have chosen to remember [Julissa Brisman] in the garden, and our hearts go out to the whole family,’’ Troop said.

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