A jury of four women and eight men deliberated the fate of Jeffery Trevino for about 7½ hours on Tuesday and resumed early Wednesday morning.
After hearing final arguments from the prosecution and defense, who respectively presented pictures of a jealous, murderous husband and another of science gone wrong with a mystery killer at large, the case went to the jury about 1:30 p.m. They recessed about 9 p.m. and restarted before 8 a.m. Wednesday. They also continued to deliberate while having lunch.
Assistant Ramsey County Attorney Richard Dusterhoft said Trevino killed his wife, Kira Steger, because he was fed up with her texting a co-worker with whom she was having an affair. He wanted to save the marriage, but she was already gone, Dusterhoft said. Divorce papers were found in her purse.
"The marriage was in deep trouble," Dusterhoft said. "She had been cheating on him. That's a powerful motive."
In his closing arguments, defense attorney John Conard continued poking holes in the presumptive blood tests and DNA results, saying that the blood tests react with other substances and that DNA lingers throughout a home. It would be expected to find Steger's DNA in her own house, he told the jury.
Trevino, 39, is on trial in Ramsey County District Court on two counts of second-degree murder for allegedly killing Steger, 30. She was last seen alive on Feb. 21. Her body was recovered from the Mississippi River on May 8.
About three dozen of Steger's family members and friends packed the courtroom with about a dozen Trevino supporters.
Steger texted her co-worker, Ryan Wendt, throughout a date night she had with Trevino on Feb. 21. Dusterhoft showed jurors text messages Steger sent Wendt while she was with Trevino at the Mall of America. In one, Steger said she was bowling with Trevino but it was really practice for bowling with Wendt.