Las Vegas Octogenarian Accused of Killing Wife
Eighty-six-year-old Joseph Woods has been charged with killing his wife, Kay Woods, as part of an apparent murder-suicide pact. After allegedly shooting her in the shoulder, he shot himself in the abdomen but did not die, and he’s currently in a nursing home receiving medical care.
Nevada murder law distinguishes between premeditated murder or felony murder (first degree) and other kinds of murder (second degree). Nevada murder law makes first degree murder a category A felony punishable by death, a life sentence, or a fifty-year sentence with the possibility of parole after twenty years. Second degree murder is also a category A felony, punishable by twenty-five years to life, with the possibility of parole after ten years.
Nevada murder law prohibits capital punishment unless the jury finds at least one aggravating factor that is not outweighed by mitigating factors. Examples of aggravating factors include if the suspect has committed murder or another violent felony in the past, if the suspect committed the murder in exchange for money, or if the victim was a police officer.