South
Carolina Man Who Killed, ‘Slow Cooked’ the Bodies of 2 Men Is Now Out on Bond
Thanks to Stand Your Ground Law
May 10, 2016 |
Posted by Tanasia Kenney
Guma Oz Dubar
(Photo Credit: Charleston County Detention Center) and James Loftis (Photo
Credit: Goose Creek Police Department)
It was a typical
Saturday night for taxi cab driver Guma Oz Dubar, 46, as he picked up
passengers in need of a ride home after a long night of partying. With
his friend James Cody Newland, 32, in tow, the two picked up a man named
James Edward Loftis from a local South Carolina strip club. Things took a turn
for the worst, however, when they dropped Loftis off at his Goose Creek home.
39-year-old Loftis
claimed the taxi driver and his friend demanded a large amount of cash for the
taxi ride and attempted to force their way into his house. That’s when he shot
both men in the head and chest. Loftis then dug a shallow grave in his backyard
and set the bodies on fire.
“They were
essentially just slow-cooked inside the grave site,” said Deputy Solicitor
Bryan Alfaro.
Police arrived at
the home later that night after Loftis’ wife reported that while she was out
of town, her husband had called her to say he “killed ‘them’ and put them in
the back yard,” the Washington Post
reports. She noticed the smell of bleach from her husband’s attempted crime
scene cleanup when she came home. She also explained to police that her
husband has a history of mental issues, per an incident report.
The South Carolina
man now faces two murder charges for the deaths of the African-American cab
driver and his friend, according to Raw Story.
The news
publication also reports that Loftis gave authorities varying accounts of what
happened the evening of March 5, 2016. He initially told police he invited the
two men in but then contradicted his story by saying they barged into his
home.
Per Rolling Out, the family and friends of Dubar,
the slain taxi driver, say that he would never force anyone to pay a cab fare;
he would instead call the police and let them handle it like he’s done in the
past.
Stephen Harris, the
attorney appointed to defend Loftis, acknowledges that what his client did was
“heinous” but he had every right to defend himself under South Carolina’s
Stand Your Ground Law.
“He’s a human
being,” Harris said. “He freaked out and thought he was going to prison, so he
tried to hide the bodies. Nobody knows how you’re going to react when you kill
two people.”
According to the
South Carolina Law Enforcement Division website, the state’s Protection or
Persons and Property Act is essentially a “Stand
Your Ground” law that legally authorizes the use of deadly force against
an intruder in your home, vehicle or place of business. The law also grants
immunity “from criminal prosecution and civil action” to individuals who
decide to use lethal force to defend themselves.
Loftis was
allegedly traumatized by the attempted home invasion and used evidence of a
size 12 shoe print at the door of his home in order to support his claim.
Per Raw Story, circuit Judge Markley Dennis
complied to allow Loftis to post $250,000 bond at a court hearing Sunday,
stating that his choice of the defense makes him less of a flight
risk. Loftis’ lawyer says he will remain under house arrest until his
trial.
One of the victim’s
daughters said she forgives Loftis for what he did, according to Live5News. Dubar’s wife isn’t willing to
forgive just yet, though.
“You took my
soulmate from me,” she said to the Post and
Courier. “He didn’t deserve to be burned.”
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