The presence of an extraordinary amount of human blood in the home and car of a missing St. Paul woman led prosecutors on Friday to make the rare move of filing murder charges against her husband despite the absence of a body.
Jeffery Trevino, 39, was charged with second-degree murder in the death of his 30-year-old wife, Kira, missing for a week. In another unusual move, the judge doubled the amount of bail prosecutors had requested for Trevino, setting it at $1 million.
Blood was found throughout the Trevino home, with the largest amounts near the bed in the master bedroom, including a large stain in the shape of a human head and torso, authorities say. In addition, clotted blood or human tissue was found in a carpet cleaner, and the blood-soaked trunk liner of her car, found parked in a remote area of the Mall of America, was found near the car.
The palpable tension at the bail hearing, attended by many members of both Kira and Jeffery Trevino's families, broke somewhat when Ramsey County District Judge Teresa R. Warner doubled the requested bail. Keri Anne Steger, Kira Trevino's sister, threw her hands in the air and loudly smacked them in triumph.
Steger, who championed the search for her sister, was unable to sit during much of the hearing and instead crouched on a courtroom bench, cupping her hands to her face in stress.
Unhappy in her marriage for months, Kira had begun telling her family and others she might move out and that Jeffery had been snooping in her bank accounts, charging documents say.
Charging someone with murder without a corpse is highly unusual. Typically, prosecutors lose such cases once they get before juries.
But there's much evidence in this case and inconsistencies in Jeffery Trevino's statements, court records show. Evidence includes video from the Mall of America of Kira's car pulling into a lot and someone, whose identity isn't clear, throwing away something. Her bloody car-trunk liner was later recovered.