Mia Zapata: Age 27 | Cause Of Death: BRAWLING/ BEATING / MYSTERIOUS CIRCUMSTANCES
(b. 25 Aug 1965, KY, d. 7 July 1993, Seattle, WA)
Mia fronted The Gits, who were rising in popularity and recording a new record, when she was brutally raped and strangled, left dead on the street while on her way home. Her murderer has never been found….UNTIL NOW…
Late breaking news:
GITS – Man Found Guilty in Rape, Death of Singer Mia Zapata
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Man Found Guilty in Rape, Death of Singer
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By Associated Press
March 25, 2004, 11:20 PM EST
SEATTLE — A man was found guilty of first-degree murder Thursday in the 1993 rape and strangulation of a rising punk-rock singer. Jesus C. Mezquia, 49, most recently of Marathon, Fla., faces anywhere from 20 years to life in prison, said Dan Donohoe, a spokesman for the King County prosecutor. No sentencing date was set. Mezquia was arrested in January 2003 in the Florida Keys after DNA from saliva found on Mia Zapata’s body linked him to the slaying. A police
investigation found Mezquia had been in the Seattle area at the time of the killing. Zapata, the 27-year-old lead singer of The Gits, was found on a Seattle street, beaten, raped and strangled with the drawstring of her sweat shirt. An autopsy found evidence of a struggle in which Zapata suffered blunt impact to her abdomen and a lacerated liver, court documents said. The jury deliberated three days before returning the guilty verdict. Family and friends of the late singer wept as the decision was read. “I’m just glad that he’ll be rotting in prison and we’ll be able to live a little bit freer lives,” said Steve Moriarty, who was The Gits’ drummer. A telephone message left for Mezquia’s attorney seeking comment was not immediately returned. Copyright (c) 2004, The Associated Press
Saturday, January 11, 2003
Police make arrest in 1993 Mia Zapata slaying
By TRACY JOHNSON
SEATTLE POST-INTELLIGENCER REPORTER
The 1993 killing of Seattle punk-rock singer Mia Zapata, which baffled police and her fans for nearly a decade, appears to have been solved with the arrest of a man in Miami.
Police say they used DNA evidence to tie Jesus Mezquia, 48, to the slaying.
The Gits, from left, were: Steve Moriarty, Matt Dresdner, Joe Spleen and Mia Zapata.
Mezquia was arrested late Friday. He is a Cuban native who lives in the Florida Keys, where police searched his home Saturday, a law-enforcement source told the P-I.
Investigators have no reason to believe Zapata, 27, knew the man — only that she somehow encountered him on Capitol Hill early July 7, 1993. That’s when she was strangled with the cord of her sweatshirt, which bore the name of her band, The Gits.
Seattle homicide Lt. Steve Brown said the arrest “resonates how powerful the latest DNA testing truly is at bringing a measure of justice to families who have been so negatively impacted by violent crime.”
King County prosecutors filed murder charges against Mezquia on Thursday, securing a warrant for his arrest, the law-enforcement source said. Documents with details about the case are sealed in King County Superior Court, although they may be made public Monday.
Mezquia is jailed in Miami and likely will face extradition to Seattle.
The recent break in the case — one of the area’s most notorious unsolved homicides – came after Seattle police decided to again run DNA evidence from the scene through a national databank of convicted criminals’ genetic profiles, something they’d tried earlier without finding a match.
But Mezquia was convicted of a crime and was forced to submit a DNA sample for the database more recently, so when Seattle police had the State Patrol Crime Lab run the Zapata evidence this time, they came up with the match, police said.
“We never give up on these cases, regardless of how much time as passed,” Brown said.
Zapata was last seen alive after midnight. She left the Comet Tavern on Capitol Hill, wearing shorts and heavy black boots, to look for a friend who lived in a nearby apartment.
The friend told police that when she left the apartment, she was probably looking to catch a cab. At 3:20 a.m., her body was found in the 100 block of 24th Avenue South.
She was lying with her arms outstretched and her ankles crossed, her body positioned in a cross-shaped pose that left some speculating about some sort of religious meaning.
Investigators believe it’s possible Zapata’s killer had simply spotted her walking on the street, or that she took him up on an offer for a ride.
Staking out Mezquia all week in Florida was a team of investigators who routinely delve into unsolved Seattle homicides — deputy prosecutors Tim Bradshaw and Steve Fogg, and Seattle homicide detectives Gregg Mixsell and Richard Gagnon.
They had a description and license-plate number of a van that Mezquia and a friend were using in a visit to the Miami area.
The four investigators weren’t available for comment.
Mezquia was somewhat of a drifter in the early 1990s, spending time in Seattle, Palm Springs and Florida, and racking up a lengthy criminal record, according to the source, who spoke only on the condition of anonymity.
He apparently came to Seattle with a woman and stayed in the Leschi area.
Washington state court records show only one apparent traffic citation that Seattle police handed him in 1994, about six months after Zapata’s death.
Bradshaw has been assigned to Mia Zapata’s death since her body was found. Mixsell and Gagnon, known as the Seattle Police Department’s “Cold Case” squad, have helped solve a number of old homicides in the past few years, including cases that languished for decades without answers.
Fogg and Bradshaw have handled the prosecution for many of those suspects. Some have pleaded guilty after being confronted with scientific evidence.
Assisting in the arrest were members of the U.S. Marshal’s Northwest Fugitive Apprehension Task Force and police in Florida.
Zapata was killed a few days after The Gits returned to Seattle after a tour of the West Coast. She was lead singer and wrote lyrics for the band, which was making a name for itself with songs filled with raw emotion.
Other bands performed benefit concerts in Seattle, Portland and San Francisco to raise money for a reward fund. Even MTV did a segment on Zapata’s death.
The youngest of three children, Zapata was also a painter and a poet.
Her voice and passion for music took her from the Ohio college town of Antioch University to the heating punk-rock scene of Seattle, where she rented an old house on Capitol Hill.
“Seattle sounded pretty good; we heard there was a music scene, so we came out to set up camp and see how things would go,” Gits bass guitarist Matt Dresdner recalled a few years ago.
Her death left a cavernous hole in the music scene. Dresdner and other friends struggled to accept the loss.
“Mia was so powerful,” band manager Staci Slater said at the time. “Everything was, like, just in your face but also soft and emotional.”
Zapata’s friends have said she was shy and not truly sold on becoming famous – all she wanted was a cabin in the woods, an old Jeep and a sheepdog.
Some of them later formed Home Alive, an organization that educates women on how to defend themselves against attackers.
A Mia Zapata poem
Home Alive
(1993 photo copyright: Lucy Hanna, used by permission. Thank you, Lucy)
Unsolved Mysteries TV show did a broadcast on Mia’s case.
The Gits