Crime & Safety

Hearing to Determine if 1978 Murder Case Goes Forward

A court hearing will be held Tuesday to determine if a convicted murderer will be tried in the 1978 stabbing death of a community leader.

A hearing is scheduled Tuesday to determine if a Laguna Beach cold case murder trial will move forward.

The trial of already convicted murderer Walter Lawrence Dalie, accused of killing a Laguna Beach civic leader in 1978, has hit some roadblocks with the deaths of two key witnesses. On Tuesday, the Orange County District Attorney’s Office may be forced to drop the charges, at least temporarily.

However, the charges will be refiled, and, in the meantime, Dalie does not pose a threat to the community because he is currently serving a 50-year sentence for the 1985 Connecticut murder of his girlfriend, said Roxi Fyad, spokeswoman for the Orange County District Attorney’s Office.

Find out what's happening in Aliso Viejofor free with the latest updates from Patch.

“He will remain in custody,” Fyad recently told Patch.

Dalie isn’t eligible for parole in the Connecticut murder until 2019, she added. The 56-year-old is accused of stabbing to death a prominent Laguna Beach architect Brent Stapleton Tobey, 55.

Find out what's happening in Aliso Viejofor free with the latest updates from Patch.

Dalie was extradited in 2011. He was linked to Tobey’s stabbing through DNA evidence, Laguna Beach police Lt. Jason Kravetz previously told Patch.

Tobey, who was killed Nov. 20, 1978, was last seen alive about 12:30 p.m. that day. He and a friend had made plans to have dinner to celebrate the conviction that day of Laguna Beach resident James Scramlin for the 1977 murder of their friend Albert Willard in his home in the city’s Temple Hills neighborhood, Kravetz said, noting that Tobey and his friend had found the victim’s body. When Tobey did not show up for dinner, his friend went to his home at 1320 Carmelita St. about 7 p.m. and found him on the floor of his bedroom in a pool of blood. He had been stabbed 17 times in the head and back with a knife.

“We suspect the victim and the suspect met up sometime between 12:30 p.m. and 2 p.m.,’’ Kravetz told Patch in 2011. Dalie told investigators he knew Tobey, but “I can’t say how well,’’ Kravetz said.

In 1978, police arrested a suspect who had been staying with Tobey, but he was quickly ruled out as a suspect, Kravetz said. The investigation was revived in 2002, when Laguna Beach Detective Paul Litchenberg submitted several items from the crime scene to the Orange County crime lab to seek a DNA match, Kravetz said.

There were no matches, though, until mid-2010, when Connecticut officials loaded some samples into its database, including Dalie’s, Kravetz said. Dalie bludgeoned his girlfriend to death with a hammer, Kravetz said. She was closing up her family’s restaurant for the night when Dalie decided to steal the day’s receipts, the lieutenant said.

“He wanted to take all the receipts for the night, but this was her family business,’’ and she resisted, Kravetz said. “He’s large, and he’s been in prison for 26 years, so he’s very intimidating,’’ Kravetz said of Dalie. “When we were watching him in prison, he looked like someone who commanded respect from all the other prisoners.’’

Sgt. Bob Rahaeuser and Kravetz interviewed Dalie three times in prison in Connecticut last year.

“I can’t say whether he confessed, but we did receive a lot of information from that, correlated with the evidence we already had,’’ Kravetz said.

Dalie grew up in Dana Point and graduated from Dana Hills High School. During the 1970s and early 1980s, he was a parolee who lived in Laguna Beach and Newport Beach. He was 19 years old and living in Newport Beach when Tobey was killed, Kravetz said.

Rich Kane contributed to this report.

Get more local news delivered straight to your inbox. Sign up for free Patch newsletters and alerts.

More from Aliso Viejo