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Woman convicted of killing husband
Wright to be sentenced Sept. 2 — on the two-year anniversary of incident

By JAYNE HANSON
Today's News-Herald
Published Thursday, August 20, 2009 8:41 PM MST

KINGMAN — A jury deliberated for just more than two hours Wednesday afternoon following a murder trial in Mohave County Superior Court in Kingman to determine a Lake Havasu City woman guilty of second-degree murder for killing her 73-year-old husband. The man was shot five times on Sept. 2, 2007, at the home the couple shared on Bear Drive.


An eight-day jury trial in the court of Judge Rick A. Williams that included 22 witness accounts concluded Candace Wright, 57, used a .32-caliber handgun to shoot her husband, William Wright, four times in the chest and once in the head.

“It was a tough case with no murder weapon, no confession, no motive and no physical evidence,” said Jeremy Huss, deputy county attorney of Mohave County Attorney’s Office. “It was an emotionally charged trial, like any murder trial is.”

Huss credits Lake Havasu City Police Department, saying they did a great job on a case that was purely circumstantial.

“They gathered enough facts to put the case together,” he said.

Wright, who called 911 at 7:05 p.m. the night of the shooting, initially told emergency responders said she left to purchase more steaks and returned home to find her husband dead on the kitchen floor, Huss said. The couple lived in the 4000 block of Bear Drive.

Wright said she had taken a 35-40-minute trip to Smith’s supermarket to purchase steaks, but authorities checked this information. Huss said authorities examined the store’s surveillance video, which showed Wright was in the store for just 4 minutes and 12 seconds. Then they added that time to the 13-minute roundtrip journey between Wright’s home and the supermarket, and authorities concluded that Wright was only out of the house for about 22 minutes, Huss explained.

Furthermore, William Wright’s autopsy determined he was killed between 4 p.m. and 7 p.m. and that all five gunshots were fatal, according to earlier reports.

Another piece of the puzzle was a receipt that revealed William Wright had purchased twin .32-caliber pistols in 2001. One was located in the nightstand but the other was nowhere to be found. “We can only speculate on what happened to the other one,” Huss said of what is believed to be the murder weapon.

Initial police investigations did locate an empty gun holster in Candace Wright’s vehicle.

There was no history of domestic violence surrounding the case, but one witnessed testified William Wright did have a problem with the amount of alcohol his wife consumed, Huss said.

During the trial, public defenders Carlene Lacy and Jason Steffen called upon a neurophysiologist to testify in Wright’s defense that the odd statements she made during initial police investigations were related to alcoholism and its brain-damaging effects she suffered.

“Bill Wright made a fatal mistake by trying to take alcohol away from an alcoholic, and that was the theme of the case,” Huss said.

The couple had been married for about two years at the time of the murder and had moved into the home on Bear Drive four months prior. Candace Wright, a retired biologist, and William Wright, a retired Los Angeles firefighter, reportedly met through a dating Web site. Neither had a prior criminal record, according to earlier reports.

A second-degree murder conviction carries penalties of 10-22 years in prison, Huss said.

Wright’s sentencing hearing is coincidentally scheduled Sept. 2, the two-year anniversary of the murder. The hearing is scheduled 2 p.m. that day in Judge Williams’ court in Kingman.

You may contact the reporter at jhanson@havasunews.com.

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Comments (9 comment(s))

    LouiseW wrote on Sep 2, 2009 7:44 PM:

    " I am the daughter of the murdered man, William Wright. As so eloquently stated by the juror, there was much to this case that was not and could not fit into a newspaper article, that was involved in this trial.

    Jasmine, if you read through this again, would you please tell me where you heard about this case? I would want to follow up with the news media to hear what was said.

    The reason for the neuropsychologist was to try to show some reason for the murderer's "odd" behavior (as it was referred to by the Public Defender) and this behavior was a result of the killer's chronic alcoholism. Basically, the Doctor was brought forward to try and disguise the reasons for many, many lies and other inconsistencies that the murderer stated to the detectives.

    Fortunately in Arizona, the law makes no distinction between circumstantial and direct evidence (IE: both get weighed the same). And believe me, the circumstantial evidence was overwhelming!

    I thank all the members of the Lake Havasu Police Department, the people at the Mohave County Attorney's office (especially, Prosecutor Jeremy Huss), the wonderful people at the Victim's Witness office, the witnesses that came forward and Judge Rick Williams for having the common sense to see this woman for the evil she turned into and sentenced her to 18 years without the possibility of parole.

    Lake Havasu, you have been wonderful toward me and your kindness and generosity will never be forgotten.

    Louise Wright "

    juror wrote on Aug 29, 2009 10:23 AM:

    " As one of the jurors who convicted Mrs. Wright, I can tell you that there was definitely more to the story than was told to the news as is the case with all trials. And no, this is not the "wild west or something". 13 people heard all the evidence from both sides. 12 people deliberated and came to the same conclusion. It was very mentally exhausting. Having a person's guilt or innocence in your hands is a very serious responsibility and we all took it very seriously. "

    BillyW wrote on Aug 28, 2009 7:01 AM:

    " Great job by the LHCPD and especially by Jeremy Huss of the County Attorney's Office! Outstanding!! "

    florida friend wrote on Aug 23, 2009 3:35 PM:

    " Bill Wright was a dear friend for 27 years. He would do anything for his friends and loved one; he was very special to all that had the pleasure of knowing him. I commend the Lake Havasu Detectives, the prosecutor, neighbors, friends and his daughter's for all their continued efforts in finding the truth and testimonies that brought justice for Bill. He will be missed everyday and my prayers go out to his family, may we all remember the fun times we had with this WONDERFUL man.

    Sail on my friend Willyum

    J.P. in Florida "

    Firebat wrote on Aug 22, 2009 9:19 AM:

    " Bill Wright was a GIANT amongst men! I'd known Bill for over 40 years, having met him early-on at L.A. County Fire Dept. when I started my career, there.

    It's my belief Candice was guilty. Bill did not have an enemy anywhere in this world. My life is not the same without him. He was a role model to hundreds of firemen in our department.

    Kudos to those who investigated and put this case together. They convicted the person who did it; no doubt in my mind, given all the facts I know of, about the case.

    Bill's daughter, Louise, is to be lauded, too, for never giving up in her effort to bring Justice to her late father.

    Thanks to the Lake Havasu authorities, Louise, and those who testified in Bill's behalf during the trial.

    Miss ya,Bill!

    Steve "Firebat" Johnson
    Sugar Springs, Michigan "

    gatekeeper wrote on Aug 21, 2009 10:39 PM:

    " A neurophysiologist was brought in to comment about this ladies statements to the police? She must have told them a bunch of stuff for some Doctor to actually evaluate what she said. I am curious as to what she was asked by the police, and what it was that she said in order to validate a conviction in court on circumstantial evidence alone. There has to be more to this case than what they are telling us. "

    jasmine wrote on Aug 21, 2009 2:45 PM:

    " I heard about this trial on the California and Nevada news. Wow, so it sounds like she ditched the gun after killing him, and then made up stories the cops were able to tear apart. This is a crazy world we live in. That poor man who served as a fireman was killed just for trying to help his alcoholic wife. What a terrible situation. Good work to the Havasu investigators who put together enough facts on what sounds like a hard case. What happened to our sleepy little town? Every other day we read about drug dealers, sexual abusers, and people who hurt thier families and children. Horrible! "

    resident wrote on Aug 21, 2009 2:06 PM:

    " "...with no murder weapon, no confession, no motive and no physical evidence." and you can convict someone of 2nd degree murder. Is this the wild west or what. "

    blues wrote on Aug 20, 2009 10:57 PM:

    " stay far away from internet dating services,.
    I am lucky to have survived a 2 month marriage. "

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