On the morning after winning Minnesota's most watched homicide trial in years, Pete Orput sank into a chair exhausted, struggling with his emotions.
Two teenagers were dead, and the man who killed them was now going to prison for the rest of his life.
"This has just wiped me out. This is just so sad," Orput said Wednesday, acknowledging that the recent trial in Little Falls, Minn., kept him so preoccupied that he hardly slept.
"It was a tragedy for the kids. It was a tragedy for that homeowner. I'm assuaged that the jury found justice in it because it was a gratuitously awful murder and it didn't have to happen."
Orput, Washington County's chief prosecutor and a notable advocate for children, said there's no cause for celebration in Tuesday's first-degree murder conviction of Byron Smith, who shot and killed teenage cousins Nick Brady and Haile Kifer after they broke into his home on Thanksgiving Day 2012.
"These two kids should have been caught, should have been prosecuted, learned a lesson, paid a price and gotten back to their lives," said Orput, who has prosecuted more than 35 murder cases in his decades-long career. "Two kids who will never come back, dead, and an old guy who really didn't want to hurt anybody his whole life, snapped, killed two kids gratuitously, and now he's done, too."
Orput, the Washington County attorney since 2010, agreed to prosecute the case at the request of the Morrison County attorney after that small office became overwhelmed with felony cases, he said. To help, he enlisted his chief assistant, Brent Wartner, who in 2004 successfully prosecuted a high-profile home invasion in Long Prairie, Minn., that resulted in the killing of three family members. Throughout Smith's 2½-week trial, the two attorneys took turns questioning witnesses and addressing the jury.
But even 17 months after the killings, Orput said he's disheartened by how a senseless chain of events led to an armed confrontation and so much misery.