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Maine man convicted of killing girl in 1988 seeks new trial

Dennis Dechaine is serving a life sentence for the murder and sexual assault of a 12-year-old girl.

ROCKLAND, Maine — A Maine man convicted of killing a 12-year-old girl more than three decades ago launched his latest bid on Thursday for a new trial by trying to convince a judge that advances in DNA testing raise questions about his guilt.

The attorney for Dennis Dechaine called his first witness at the start of a two-day hearing in Knox County Superior Court. Dechaine is trying to make the case that tests conducted by a California laboratory excluded his DNA from several items found at the crime scene, requiring a new trial in which jurors could weigh all the evidence.

Prosecutors have contended plenty of other evidence links Dechaine to the crime and that his DNA could not be excluded from several other items.

Dechaine, 66, is serving a life sentence for the murder and sexual assault of Sarah Cherry, who disappeared while babysitting in Bowdoin in July 1988. Her body was found two days later.

A car repair receipt and notebook belonging to Dechaine were found outside the Bowdoin home where the victim was babysitting before her abduction. Yellow rope used to bind her hands matched rope in Dechaine’s truck, which was parked near the location where the girl’s body was found.

Dechaine, who was 30 at the time of the killing, contends the evidence was planted while he was doing drugs in the woods.

The farmer from Bowdoinham has a fierce group of supporters who say he couldn't be the killer. They’ve pointed to alternative suspects.

"He [Dechaine] feels confident about it and he should. He didn't do it," attorney John Nale said. "They arrested him on circumstantial evidence, and when they [prosecutors] went looking for their bread and butter evidence, like the fingernail blood and DNA and fingerprints and fiber evidence, they came up empty."

The Maine Supreme Judicial Court denied several previous requests for a new trial, concluding that there was sufficient evidence to convict Dechaine regardless of the updated DNA tests.

"There absolutely should not be a new trial. We are hoping that this hearing will put to rest finally the case of Dennis Dechaine and give the Cherry family some peace, and may Sarah Cherry rest in peace," Assistant Attorney General Lisa Marchese said.

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