Battle continues between Ricky Riffe, Lewis County prosecutors

By Sharyn  L. Decker
Lewis County Sirens news reporter

CHEHALIS – Notice was forwarded today to the state Court of Appeals that Ricky A. Riffe is contesting everything about his conviction for the 1985 slaying of Ed and Minnie Maurin, the elderly couple found dead on a logging road outside Adna days after vanishing from their Ethel farmhouse.

Riffe, 55, was condemned to nearly 103 years in prison following his autumn trial in Lewis County Superior Court.

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Ricky A. Riffe

The former Mossyrock man who was extradited from his longtime home in King Salmon, Alaska finding himself accused in the nearly 30-year-old case remains in the Lewis County Jail, but has otherwise virtually “checked out” since a jury in November found him guilty as charged of kidnapping, robbery and murder.

At his sentencing last month, the man who had been escorted to court each day previously in slacks and sweaters appeared unshaven and directed his attorney not to make any recommendation on his behalf. Riffe maintains he has nothing to apologize for regarding the case.

He declined to attend a proceeding yesterday in which a judge was asked to determine how much restitution he owed the victims’ families.

Lewis County Superior Court Judge Richard Brosey signed an order presented by prosecutors that Riffe should repay the $8,500 he was convicted of taking from the Maurins, plus their funeral expenses of roughly $5,450. His lawyer’s signature was noted on the document as approved telephonically.

That amount is on top of the more than $13,000 in legal financial obligations the judge attached to Riffe’s judgement and sentence back in December, fees and other amounts such as $100 to collect his DNA, $1,000 for his jail stay and more than $8,600 prosecutors spent to bring in their numerous witnesses.

He was even assessed $192 for food and his oxygen along with the airfare for returning him to Lewis County in July 2012. He apparently suffers from COPD.

The grand total, according to court documents, is $27,355, plus 4 cents.

Riffe is expected to begin paying off the debt in February, at a rate of $25 per month.

Also yesterday, a date was set of Jan. 16 for a review of his pending trial for another new old case. Early last year, while he was in the jail waiting for his murder trial, prosecutors filed charges for child rape and molestation, related to incidents which were alleged and investigated in the mid-1980s regarding his then step-daughter.

That trial is currently scheduled for next month.

Riffe has denied any sexual contact, according to charging documents. Prosecutors and his defense attorney disagree as to whether the statute of limitations has passed.

It’s because of the pending trial, Riffe remains held in the Lewis County Jail, and has not yet been transferred to prison, according to Lewis County Prosecutor Jonathan Meyer.

The 1985 deaths of the Maurins, who were in their early 80s, was described by Meyer as the most heinous crime he had seen in his career.

During a six-week trial, he and Senior Deputy Prosecutor Will Halstead presented information that indicated someone forced the couple from their home, made them drive to their bank in Chehalis to empty out an account and then out to Stearns Hill Road, where they were shot in the backs, each with one shotgun blast.

An eyewitness who didn’t come forward until 2003 testified that he briefly saw Ricky and John Gregory Riffe inside the Maurin’s Chrysler Newport with the couple on U.S. Highway 12 and that his life was subsequently threatened by the now-deceased younger brother. A former drug dealer who took the stand told of a time almost 28 years earlier when the Riffe brothers seemingly bragged they’d gotten away with it.

Riffe was convicted as the principal or an accomplice, in the case in which prosecutors at the end revealed they believed may have involved more perpetrators than just the two brothers.

Seattle-based defense attorney John Crowley argued there was no real evidence against his client, and it was fear and rumor that led to the accusations.

Crowley insisted that at least 10 individuals who were called to testify made wholesale changes from their original statements to police and that the jury heard knowingly perjured testimony in one instance.

On Monday, as the 30-day deadline approached, Crowley filed a notice of appeal, stating that his client appeals his conviction, his sentence, his trial, the judgement and all pre-trial matters relating to the case.
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For background, read “Riffe maintains innocence in face of sentence of more than a century for Maurin murders” from Tuesday December 3, 2013, here

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2 Responses to “Battle continues between Ricky Riffe, Lewis County prosecutors”

  1. BobbyinLC says:

    And he gets to spend his time county lock up while this is going on instead of the state prison.

  2. sunshinegirl says:

    Gee whiz ! A murderer denies the rape of a child , what a shocker!!Hope one day soon news of this creep will be no more. Send him down the chute .