Advertisement

Haynes Changes Plea to Guilty in Executive’s Death : Courts: Grandmother faces 19 years to life in prison, but her granddaughters won’t have to testify about alleged abuse.

Share
TIMES STAFF WRITER

Jo Lula Haynes, the snowy-haired grandmother on trial for fatally shooting Walt Disney Co. executive Kenneth Lisi, accepted a prosecution offer and pleaded guilty to second degree murder Thursday.

The plea ended the trial and made the testimony of her granddaughters, whom Haynes claimed had been molested by Lisi, unnecessary.

Authorities said Haynes, 75, whose trial for the murder of her estranged son-in-law began Tuesday in Van Nuys, now faces 19 years to life in prison and may not be paroled before she reaches age 86. If convicted of first degree murder, she would have faced life in prison without parole, authorities said.

Advertisement

“Truthfully, any sentence is a life sentence for her,” said Deputy Dist. Atty. Carole Chizever.

Van Nuys Superior Court Judge Bert Glennon Jr. scheduled sentencing for Jan. 19.

As Haynes entered her plea, the victim’s father and the victim’s former fiancee, Mary Dirstine, tearfully hugged each other.

“I think anything she serves is going to be a lifetime,” said Ernest Lisi, who testified earlier how he watched in horror as Haynes repeatedly shot his son on Halloween night two years ago. “Everyone’s relieved.”

Kenneth Lisi, 43, was embroiled in a bitter divorce dispute with Haynes’ daughter, Pamela, when he was shot outside the family home in Northridge. Lisi, who was followed by his parents in a separate car the night of the shooting, arrived at the Louise Avenue house to pick up his two young daughters, whose custody he had won ten weeks earlier.

Haynes, according to testimony during the two-day trial, ambushed Kenneth Lisi and fired three bullets from a .38-caliber revolver into him.

Glennon said he will recommend that Haynes be housed in a minimum security prison close to her family, where she also could receive medical treatment for her bursitis, high blood pressure and diabetes.

Advertisement

Haynes’ lawyer, Deputy Public Defender Michael M. Duffey, said Haynes reached the decision to change her plea from not guilty following discussions with family members. Her relatives were divided on whether she should accept the deal, Duffey said.

“Basically, the defendant made the decision,” he said. “She’s comfortable with her decision. She knows it’s going to be controversial with the family members.”

Elisabeth Haynes, one of the defendant’s daughters, said she opposed the decision to strike a deal.

“I think the jury would have found she did it in self defense and in the defense of others,” she said.

Relatives and friends said marital problems between Pamela and Kenneth Lisi were severe enough that he moved out of the Northridge home in 1992 after living there for nearly 15 years of marriage. The couple and their two girls--who were 4 and 11 years old at the time of the shooting--had shared the home with Haynes.

Eventually, Pamela Lisi made the first of several accusations that Lisi molested his youngest daughter. Authorities said there was no proof of the allegations against Kenneth Lisi, who had filed for divorce.

Advertisement

Nevertheless, Haynes believed Lisi was harming her grandchildren and she decided to do something about it, according to the defense.

Duffey said that if the trial had continued, the defense would have explored the alleged molestation. The girls and Haynes would have been expected to testify, he said.

“This was going to become another trial within a trial,” said Duffey, who said he had hoped to persuade jurors that Haynes was guilty of, at worst, manslaughter. “The grandmother truly believed that these children were being molested and acted on that belief in killing the son-in-law.”

Chizever said she was confident that jurors would have returned a murder conviction if Haynes had not accepted the deal. Haynes committed the shooting, it was premeditated and deliberate, and her intent was to kill Kenneth Lisi, Chizever said.

The prosecutor said she and the victim’s family had long talks about whether to offer a second-degree murder deal to the defense. It was agreed upon as a way to avoid dragging the family’s name “through the mud,” she said.

Times staff writers Ann W. O’Neill and Sharon Bernstein contributed to this story.

Advertisement