November 28, 2012
Judge rejects plea deal in Goble murder case
Chris Dorst
A judge rejected a tentative plea agreement for Charles Eugene March (left) on Wednesday because the results of several forensic examinations have not yet arrived. March's lawyer, Kanawha County assistant public defender Richard Holicker (right), said that he did not agree with March's decision to enter the plea.
Chris Dorst
Kanawha Circuit Judge Duke Bloom also appointed March a second attorney for another opinion on whether the plea is in his best interest.
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CHARLESTON, W.Va. -- A Kanawha County judge on Wednesday rejected a tentative plea agreement in the case of Charles Eugene March, who authorities say strangled his co-worker and buried her in the back yard of his Chesapeake property.

Despite a soft objection from the frail March, whom sheriff deputies pushed into the courtroom in a wheelchair, Circuit Judge Duke Bloom noted that forensic and psychological tests have not yet been completed and pushed the date of the trial to Dec. 26.

"I'm fine," March, 60, told the judge during the hearing. "I'd just like to have this over with if possible."

March's son, who was attempting to fill a sinkhole behind his father's trailer at 12736 Ohio Ave. in Chesapeake, found Kathy Goble's remains in late April. March was arrested that day and later indicted on charges of first-degree murder and concealment of a body.

It wasn't clear what charges March would have admitted to as part of Wednesday's plea deal. Bloom issued a gag order on the parties in the case earlier this year, so prosecutors could not comment.

March's attorney, Richard Holicker, told the judge that he did not agree with his client's decision to enter the plea. Medical examiners have not yet completed Goble's autopsy and prosecutors have not received the results of a forensic evaluation.

March, also against his lawyer's advice, backed out of a psychiatric exam, which would have determined whether he is competent to stand trial.

In August, jail officials said March tried to kill himself by climbing on a railing in a South Central Regional Jail pod and falling backward about 15 feet to the concrete floor. He was treated and released from CAMC General Hospital.

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