ASHLAND – Attorneys for accused serial killer Shawn Grate are halting their efforts to have him ruled not guilty by reason of insanity.
During a brief hearing Friday morning in Ashland County Common Pleas Court, Grate’s attorney Robert Whitney told Judge Ron Forsthoefel that Grate had agreed to his attorneys’ recommendation to withdraw their written motion to plead not guilty by reason of insanity.
Grate did not appear via Skype for the hearing.
“Mr. Grate is refusing to come out of his cell. He says it’s just a competency hearing. He does not need to be here and his attorney can take care of it,” said Deputy Brian Martin at the Ashland County Jail.
Forsthoefel and Whitney agreed that Grate did not need to be present for the hearing.
Grate was previously found competent to stand trial, meaning he was able to participate in his own defense and understood the charges.
The next step was to determine Grate’s sanity at the time of the crimes. A doctor from the Mansfield Forensic Diagnostic Center said that accused serial killer Shawn Grate was sane at the time he allegedly committed two murders.
The defense had requested extra time for their expert to examine Grate before deciding how to proceed with a not guilty by reason of insanity plea. The defense did not present a report from their expert, instead deciding to withdraw their plea.
The trial against Grate is scheduled to start on Nov. 6.
Grate was arrested Sept. 13 after a woman called 911 and said she was being held against her will in a home near East Fourth Street in Ashland. Upon their arrival, police found the woman and Grate. The woman is not being identified because she is a sexual assault victim and the Ashland County Prosecutor does not identify victims of sexual assault.
Grate was taken into custody and police and BCI investigators searched the two homes on Covert Court, near the Fourth Street Laundromat. Two bodies were discovered in one of the homes. The victims were identified as 43-year-old Stanley of Greenwich and 29-year old Griffith of Ashland.
Grate, 40, has been indicted on 23 felony counts and could face the death penalty if found guilty. He is being held in Ashland County Jail on $1 million bond.
Grate pleaded not guilty to all 23 counts but also admitted to the killings in several interviews with Cleveland news stations before a gag order was imposed on all parties involved in the case.
Grate has also been tied to three other victims. After his arrest, Grate led investigators to a body in a wooded area near a burned-out home on Park Avenue East in Madison Township. Authorities identified the body in November as 29-year-old Candace Cunningham of Canton, who reportedly was in a relationship with Grate.
Mansfield Police also have re-opened the investigation into the death of Mansfield resident Rebekah Leicy. Leicy was reported missing in February of 2015 and her body was found in rural Ashland County in March 2015. Her death was ruled as a probable drug overdose by the Cuyahoga County Coroner’s Office as there were no signs of physical trauma.
Grate has also been tied to a 2005 murder in Marion County. He reportedly admitted to authorities that he killed a woman there in 2005. On March 10, 2007, Marion County authorities discovered the remains of a woman who has never been identified. The Marion County Sheriff’s Office released a new sketch of the woman in October in a renewed effort to identify her.
