THIBODAUX — A Houma man charged with the August 1992 slaying of a Thibodaux priest won't receive prison time if convicted of the crime, a district judge ruled Thursday.
Derrick Odomes, who was 14 when the Rev. Hunter Horgan III was killed, cannot be sentenced if convicted of first-degree murder in the priest's death, Judge John LeBlanc ruled. State law in 1992, the year of Horgan's murder, forbid juveniles convicted of a crime from serving time past their 21st birthday.
“The law was clear, and the judge basically did what he had to do,” said Lynden Burton, Odomes' New Iberia-based defense attorney.
Odomes was arrested Sept. 17, 2007, more than 15 years after he allegedly stabbed Horgan to death inside St. John Episcopal Church's rectory on Jackson Street in Thibodaux. At the time of his arrest, Odomes was 29.
Judge LeBlanc's decision does not mean Odomes, now 31, would necessarily walk free the day a jury renders a verdict in his murder trial, which is set to begin Aug. 23.
Odomes faces an undetermined amount of prison time, if convicted, for felony theft, issuing worthless checks and obscenity — charges unrelated to Horgan's slaying.
Odomes' continuing troubles with the law indicate that he may not have changed direction and made the decision to become a law-abiding citizen since the horrific crime so many years ago. He could still be a dangerous man.
I was not a member of St. John's Church when Fr Horgan was murdered, but the killing stunned the entire town. I give great credit to the members of the church who, by the grace of God and their own strength and determination, continued to move forward in the work of the Lord in the wake of the trauma.
I pray for the family and friends of Hunter Horgan and for the congregation of St John.
I pray for repentance and a change of heart for Derrick Odomes.