HOLBROOK, Ariz. — Investigators declined to reveal the suspected motive in the shooting death of a prominent California farmer's estranged wife in eastern Arizona, but they said the couple's prolonged divorce case arose in nearly all interviews with family and friends.
Michael Abatti, 63, was arrested last week in El Centro, California, in the shooting death of Kerri Ann Abatti, 59, at her family's vacation home in Pinetop, Arizona, where she moved after splitting with her husband.
Investigators, who discussed the case at a news conference Monday, say Michael Abatti traveled from El Centro to Pinetop on Nov. 20, carried out the killing and returned to California early the next morning. They declined to say what occurred at the Pinetop house in the last days of Kerri Abatti's life.
''Different theories will come up,'' Navajo County Sheriff David Clouse said of the motive. ''The only thing that's glaring that I think everybody already knows is there's a divorce in place and they weren't able to come to a resolution. But I can't speak exactly to what the motive would be.''
Owen Roth, one of Michael Abatti's attorneys, said his client surrendered to law enforcement, agreed to be extradited to Arizona and remains innocent under the law. ''Our client is in his mid-60s and has significant health issues, and we continue to worry about his well-being,'' Roth said. ''We ask the public to respect his privacy and constitutional rights and reiterate that this case will be decided based on the evidence by a jury.'' An autopsy report released Monday said Kerri Abatti's cause of death was a gunshot wound to the head.
The report said she was found unconscious on the floor near her kitchen by her nephew, who told investigators he heard a loud sound before finding her. When investigators searched the home they found a ''circular defect'' on a window and determined ''a gunshot likely originated from the yard outside the home,'' the autopsy report said.
The Associated Press left a message for the Navajo County Sheriff's Office for further explanation. The medical examiner's office in Coconino County, which conducted the autopsy, directed questions about the report to a Navajo County official, and the AP also left a message for the official. A descendant of early Latter-day Saints settlers who helped found Pinetop in the 1880s, Kerri had filed for divorce, with proceedings pending in California at the time of her death.
Authorities searched his home in far Southern California on Dec. 2 as part of the investigation into his wife's death.