PAROLE DENIED FOR FIVE YEARS FOR INMATE WHO MURDERED MOTEL EMPLOYEE

For Immediate Release




August 28, 2012

Susan Kang Schroeder
Chief of Staff
Office: 714-347-8408
Cell: 714-292-2718

Farrah Emami
Spokesperson
Office: 714-347-8405
Cell: 714-323-4486

 

 

PAROLE DENIED FOR FIVE YEARS FOR INMATE WHO MURDERED MOTEL EMPLOYEE

 

SANTA ANA – The Board of Parole Hearings, California Department of Corrections denied parole today for five years for an inmate who murdered an employee of a motel where the inmate was renting a room. Robert Charles Johnson, 50, is currently being held at Kern Valley State Prison, Delano. Johnson was found guilty by a jury Oct. 29, 1982, of one felony count of murder and sentenced to 16 years to life in state prison. The case was originally prosecuted by then Deputy District Attorney Thomas Goethals.

 

Deputy District Attorney Brett Brian appeared today on behalf of the Orange County District Attorney’s Office to oppose parole. Johnson will be eligible for parole in 2017.

 

Murder of Elderly Motel Employee Edward Nardone

In January 1982, Johnson had been temporarily staying at the Musketeer Motel in Anaheim. At approximately midnight on Jan. 25, 1982, 20-year-old Johnson murdered 61-year-old Edward Nardone, an employee at the motel. During the murder, a patron of the motel heard loud noises from the victim’s room and called the Anaheim Police Department (APD). APD officers responded to the scene and found the victim bound and gagged in his room with nine stab wounds to his chest, wrist, shoulder, back, and neck. The victim died at the scene.

 

Threat To Public Safety and Failure to Accept Responsibility

The inmate has failed to recognize or accept responsibility for the murder and lacks awareness and understanding of the severity of his crime. The inmate has lied to police by giving various versions of the events and has failed to provide accurate details regarding the execution of the murder.

 

While incarcerated, the inmate has violated numerous prison rules. Since his last hearing, Johnson has engaged in mutual combat, battery on a non-prisoner, and willfully obstructing a police officer. Johnson has failed to follow previous Board recommendations that he obtain his GED, remain discipline free, and participate in self-help programs that would help prevent him from engaging in criminal behavior in the future. Johnson’s ongoing disobedience in a controlled environment shows he would have posed a significant risk of danger to society had he been released.