Johnny Volpato
Eddy
County, New Mexico
Date of Crime: February 5, 1980
“Shortly before midnight on February 5, 1980, Johnny Volpato
pulled up to The Corner Drugstore, which he owned, in downtown Carlsbad.
Sitting beside him in his late-model Datson was his 36-year-old wife,
Elaine. The after-hours drugstore run wasn't unusual for the pharmacist,
father of two, and rising local political star. Volpato often opened his
drug store at all hours to fill customers' emergency prescriptions. In fact,
he even ran ads in the local newspaper with his home phone number so that he
could be reached at any time.
On this night Volpato had received such an emergency call at home around 11
o'clock. Elaine allegedly decided to accompany him since she needed a few
things from the drug store. Soon after the two walked inside, someone
knocked on the front door. Volpato answered. An Hispanic man came inside
and, as he asked for his prescription, pulled out a gun.
At this moment, Elaine came from the back of the drugstore, saw the gun,
screamed, then ran down a back hallway toward the back door. The gunman shot
her. The 43-year-old Volpato ran to the phone and as he dialed 911, the
gunman also fired at him. A second man entered, and he and the gunman filled
a box with drugs and fled. As Volpato crawled toward the front door he
collapsed. He was wounded in his hand and shoulder.
Emergency personnel rushed the pharmacist to Dallas for emergency surgery;
Elaine died. Autopsy reports concluded she was shot four times, twice in her
chest and twice in the back.
At first, the folks of Carlsbad rallied around the injured and grieving
Volpato. No one seemed to doubt his story that robbers had killed his wife
and left him for dead. After all, in the years since he had graduated from
the University of New Mexico's pharmacy school in 1961, the father of two
had become a social and political pillar in the small desert town. The
meticulously dressed, well-spoken Volpato served on the city council,
participated in community affairs, and even dispensed free medicine to those
in need. The Corner Drugstore became the gathering spot for Carlsbad's
movers and shakers.
But Johnny Volpato had a wild side. Beyond the duties of his drugstore, his
family, and his political career, Volpato spent long, boozy hours in
Carlsbad's nightspots with his pals. His womanizing exploits became well
known, even to Elaine. Not long before her death, Volpato walked out on his
wife. She filed for divorce. But after a year of separation, Volpato
convinced her to give the marriage another try, and he moved back into their
fashionable home on the Pecos River. The Volpatos appeared to be a happy
couple again. Still, ugly rumors of Johnny's marital infidelities persisted.
By the time Volpato returned home from his Dallas hospital stay, local
police had tough questions for him. Why had the robbers only wounded Johnny
in the hand and shoulder, yet shot the fleeing Elaine four times, twice from
behind, and strangely, twice from the front? Where was Johnny's own Colt 38
revolver, a gun like the one used to kill Elaine? Why couldn't he produce it
for police? Was the popular pharmacist trying to avoid a costly and
embarrassing divorce by murdering his wife?
A search of the Volpato home yielded a bullet that proved similar to the
bullets lodged in Elaine's body. Careful inspection of The Corner Drugstore
revealed a small niche under a wooden staircase, where police believed
Volpato could have hidden the Colt 38. Splintered wood suggested that
Volpato later pried the gun from its hiding place and disposed of it.
A year after Elaine's death, police arrested Volpato, charging him with
first-degree murder. The news divided the people of Carlsbad into warring
factions: You were either for Johnny Volpato or against him.
In his trial, Volpato took the stand to claim police framed him. He called
the trial a ‘political execution’ maneuvered by the same people who had once
befriended him. Prosecutor Ernest Carroll presented a circumstantial case.
He described what he termed ‘silent witnesses,’ including the incriminating
bullets found in Volpato's home, the coroner's report revealing how Elaine
died, and the break-up of his marriage.
The jury debated 20 hours before returning a guilty verdict on October 8,
1981. Volpato was sentenced to life in prison without possibility of parole
for 30 years.
Volpato appealed to the New Mexico Supreme Court, which in 1985 granted a
new trial. An expanded defense team presented three new witnesses in
Volpato's second trial in 1986.
One witness, Delores Looney, testified that she saw two men outside The
Corner Drugstore at around midnight on the night Elaine Volpato was
murdered. As she continued in her car down the street, she said she heard a
sound that she later concluded was gunfire. She testified that she had not
gone to police because she was afraid of repercussions against her son, who
had troubles with the law.
Two nurses who worked at a nearby hospital also testified that they saw two
men running from Volpato's drugstore on the night of the murder. They said
at the time that they were sure they had witnessed a robbery and reported
their suspicions to police. They said police did not take their report
seriously. The prosecution countered that, after six years, these new
witness accounts were not credible.
The jury apparently thought they were. On October 31, 1986, they found
Johnny Volpato not guilty of murdering of his wife.” –
B. J. Welborn
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References: City Confidential: Carlsbad,
State v. Volpato
Posted in:
Victims of the State,
New Mexico Cases, Wife
Murder Cases
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