The soldier's defense
rests partly on the fact he and his identical twin brother have
virtually the same DNA, an attempt to undercut authorities' allegations
that the DNA from the crime scenes belongs to the soldier.
The defendant, Aaron
Gregory Lucas, 32, is also a suspect in sex crimes in two other states,
authorities say. In addition to raising his twin brother as a suspect,
Lucas also claims that a third man may be the culprit in some of the
crimes, court papers say
.
A Colorado judge in El
Paso County ruled last week that Lucas will be allowed to name his twin
brother, Brian Lucas, as a suspect in his defense. The judge also
allowed the defense attorneys to use the name of a third man as a
suspect, too.
The twin brother, who hasn't been charged in the any of the crimes, could not be reached by CNN for comment.
So-called "evil twin"
defenses have been used before in courtrooms, experts say. Defendants
with an identical twin have sometimes accused the sibling as the real
culprit to try to create reasonable doubt and seek acquittal, but the
finger-pointing isn't a sure-fire strategy, said CNN legal analyst Danny
Cevallos, who's also a criminal defense attorney.
"No two of us have the same set of DNA -- with one exception and that is identical twins," Cevallos said.
"Cases like this are
interesting," he added. "Each twin essentially has to come up with an
alibi, and we're seeing that in this case and seeing it in other cases.
It comes down to whose alibi is a little bit better. You can imagine the
complexity if both twins are in the same geographic area at the same
time of the crime."
In fact, both Lucas
brothers lived in Alabama and Texas, where the other sexual assaults
occurred, but authorities in Alabama, Texas and Colorado say Aaron Lucas
is the focus of their investigations, Colorado prosecutors said. Brian
Lucas has been to Colorado only once in the past decade and didn't visit
El Paso County, according to the Colorado Springs Gazette, citing a
police detective's testimony last week.
Aaron Lucas, a decorated
Army officer assigned to Fort Carson in Colorado Springs, is accused of
trying to lure 11 girls between ages 6 and 9 and sexually assaulting
three of them, authorities said.
In all, Aaron Lucas
faces 27 charges in six cases, officials said. Prosecutors want all the
cases to be heard together, but defense attorneys do not. A hearing is
scheduled for Tuesday to address the prosecution's request.
The 27 charges include
two counts of second-degree kidnapping with a sex offense on a child;
one count of kidnapping with enticement of a child; two counts of
aggravated sexual assault on a child; four counts of attempted sexual
assault on a child; one count of sexual assault on a child; and other
charges. Aaron Lucas is also charged with being a fugitive from justice
in the Alabama and Texas cases.
The Colorado crimes
occurred in Fountain, Colorado Springs and unincorporated El Paso County
from summer 2010 until late 2012, when Aaron Lucas was arrested, CNN
affiliate KKTV reported last year. The Colorado crimes began at the same
time that Aaron Lucas was first stationed at Fort Carson, the affiliate
reported.
Both of the Texas and
Alabama cases "involve DNA evidence that the prosecution states matches
the DNA of Aaron Lucas," defense attorneys said in court papers.
When Aaron Lucas was
arrested last year, Colorado authorities took his DNA and ran the
findings in a national law enforcement database, said police in Madison,
Alabama, and Texarkana, Texas. His DNA matched samples found in
unsolved sex crimes in those jurisdictions, police said.
But Aaron Lucas offers a different interpretation of those findings.
"Aaron Lucas has an
identical twin brother, Brian Lucas, who has (a) similar DNA profile,"
Aaron Lucas' attorneys said in court documents. "Additionally, witness
statements from the Alabama case describe a vehicle matching that of
Brian Lucas being in the area of the attack prior to the assault.
"The defense believes
that Mr. Brian Lucas contributed the DNA in the Alabama and Texas cases
and that it is his DNA that was found during those crimes, not Aaron
Lucas's."
Aaron Lucas also argues
that some of the Colorado Springs sex crimes may have been committed by a
man who had been arrested for indecent exposure, defense attorneys said
in court papers.
That man, whose name is
listed in court papers, also "bears a striking resemblance to the
descriptions provided by several of the complaining witnesses (and)
owned and drove vehicles matching the descriptions of the vehicles
driven by the alleged perpetrator," the attorneys said.
Aaron Lucas's attorneys
said it is unclear whether the twin brother will be compelled to appear
during the trial, expected to begin in January.

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