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Verdict reached in cold case trial involving former Pasco police officer

After appearing in court numerous times in connection to the case, Richard Aguirre is being charged with first-degree murder for Ruby Doss' death.

SPOKANE COUNTY, Wash. — A Spokane County judge found a former Pasco police officer guilty in the cold case killing of a woman found dead near a horse racing track in 1986. 

After appearing in court numerous times in connection to the case, Richard Aguirre is being charged with first-degree murder for Ruby Doss' death.

Sentencing for Aguirre has been scheduled for February 5, 2024, at 8:30 a.m.  He will remain in detention until his sentencing date. 

More to Every Story: Ruby Doss' Murder

Ruby Doss' body was found near the old Spokane Playfair Race Course in 1986. For decades, investigators could not find a suspect in her death. That was until 2015, when a forensic scientist matched DNA on a condom found near Doss' body to former Pasco police officer Richard Aguirre. The DNA match coincided with investigators collecting evidence for a rape investigation involving Aguirre in Franklin County. Aguirre was later found not guilty of rape by a jury in 2017. 

In 2016, Aguirre was charged with Doss' murder, but due to a lack of evidence, the charge was dropped a year later. 

Aguirre was 19-years-old at the time of Ruby Doss' (27) death. Police said Aguirre lived in Spokane at the time the murder was committed. He was in the Air Force stationed at Fairchild. He later joined the Pasco Police Department in 1988 and worked as an officer until he retired in 2014. 

Credit: KREM 2 News
Richard Aguirre (R), Ruby Doss (L)

Investigators say Doss and Aguirre had a "sexual encounter" that turned into a physical altercation, according to court documents. Detectives believe Doss drew a knife at some point during the altercation but was disarmed and ran away to the area where her body was later found. Police said they found Doss' belongings in a manure pit. They also found a steak knife and a used condom, all of which were sent to a DNA lab in 1989 and again in 2001. Neither test returned any matches. 

In 2021, Aguirre appeared in court again. Prosecutors believed they had enough evidence to convict him of first or second-degree murder. A mistrial was declared after a jury failed to reach a unanimous verdict. 

Two years later, Aguirre found himself in court again for the cold case. This time, he was without a jury after Aguirre waived his right to a jury during a trial in October - meaning the judge would decide if Aguirre was responsible for Doss' death. 

The first day of the trial saw one of Doss' daughters speak as a witness, and the following day, prosecutors called former detectives who investigated the murder to the stand. 

During the month-long trial, prosecutors argued DNA from the condom found at the crime scene near Doss' body was connected to Aguirre. They also argued that footprints found at the scene matched Aguirre. 

Aguirre's defense claimed the DNA from the condom was mishandled and cross-contaminated and that the footprints could not be accurately identified as Aguirre's. 

A judge ultimately found Aguirre guilty of first-degree murder for Doss' death.

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