WILLMAR – Prosecutors began the trial of Brok Junkermeier, the 19-year-old charged with murdering his friend's grandmother, Lila Warwick, with a graphic description of the 79-year-old's death.
Matthew Frank, assistant attorney general, told jurors Friday that Junkermeier, wearing a black hoodie and ski mask, allegedly choked Warwick for 15 to 20 minutes. Frank said Junkermeier tried to break her neck, "but she was still breathing." So he then allegedly grabbed his knife and stabbed her several times, Frank said.
"He then took his mask off, because he was hot as hell."
Junkermeier has pleaded not guilty to first-degree murder charges for carrying out the July ambush robbery and attack prosecutors say he planned with Warwick's grandson, Robert Inocencio Warwick, 18.
In a three-minute opening statement, Junkermeier's attorney Kent Marshall said that Junkermeier killed Lila Warwick: "Of that there will be no doubt."
But he argued that doesn't mean that Junkermeier is guilty of the two charges — first-degree, premeditated murder and first-degree murder in the course of a burglary. The two charges are "very different in a lot of respects," Marshall said later outside the Kandiyohi County Courthouse. He declined to elaborate.
Junkermeier, wearing a tan suitcoat, black tie and glasses, sat quietly in the Kandiyohi County Courthouse, occasionally conferring with Marshall and watching as the prosecution flipped through photographs of the crime scene — Lila Warwick's rambler on the east edge of Willmar.
Junkermeier and Robert Warwick, who was 17 at the time, "believed there was a lot of money" in Lila Warwick's safe, according to a March memo from prosecutors. Warwick allegedly told Junkermeier about his grandmother's house and habits, including where she hid a spare key.