Phoenix double murderer sentenced to death for brutal crimes committed in 1990
AZ man found gulity of first-degree murder, kidnapping, and attempted sexual assault
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A man convicted of sexually attacking and fatally stabbing two young Phoenix women in separate killings in the early 1990s was sentenced to death by a judge Wednesday.
Bryan Patrick Miller, 50, was convicted in April on two counts of first-degree murder, kidnapping and attempted sexual assault.
He had waived his right to a jury trial and Maricopa County Superior Court Judge Suzanne Cohen found Miller guilty of killing Angela Brosso in November 1992 on the eve of her 22nd birthday and 17-year-old Melanie Bernas in September 1993.
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The judge also ruled in April that Miller was eligible for the death penalty.
Miller did not testify in the double murder trial that began in early October 2022 and pleaded not guilty by reason of insanity.
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Brosso and Bernas both disappeared while riding their bicycles along the Arizona Canal in north Phoenix, according to authorities.
Police believe the killer knocked Brasso off her bicycle, stabbed her and dragged her off the trail. Her naked body was found decapitated near a bike trail.
Ten months later, police said Bernas’ body was discovered floating in the canal. Bernas was not decapitated, but her bicycle was missing.
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Authorities said DNA evidence collected in the aftermath of both crimes showed the attacks were linked to the same suspect and Miller was arrested for the murders in January 2015.
According to police, Miller denied any involvement although he acknowledged living in the vicinity of the killings at the time and said he rode his bike on paths in the area.
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It took years before Miller was found mentally competent to stand trial.
In the trial’s sentencing phase, Miller’s attorneys pleaded with Cohen to show mercy and give him life in prison but prosecutors said he deserved the death penalty.