Witness describes '99 killing

S.L. woman is first to testify during preliminary hearing

Published: Wednesday, Nov. 25 2009 1:15 a.m. MST

Erin Warn appeared calm and poised Tuesday as she pointed across the courtroom and identified Donald Eugene Younge as the man who stabbed her 10 years ago, nearly slicing her liver in two, and then killed Amy Quinton.

Warn was the first witness during a preliminary hearing to testify against Younge, 43, who is charged with aggravated murder and nine other charges, all of them first-degree felonies.

Third District Judge Ann Boyden on Tuesday ordered Younge to stand trial on all 10 charges, which also include aggravated robbery, aggravated burglary and attempted aggravated murder.

Prosecutors have not yet declared whether they will seek the death penalty if Younge is convicted.

Quinton, 22, was a popular University of Utah theater student who died after being stabbed in the chest on Aug. 3, 1999, in the Salt Lake apartment she shared with roommate Lynn Drebes.

Warn testified she had gone to the apartment at 127 S. 800 East to visit Drebes and drop off her cat because Warn was going on a trip. Quinton was studying in her bedroom while Warn and Drebes visited on a patio area, then went inside to watch a movie and eat pizza in Drebes' bedroom.

Warn said Drebes left the room to get more pizza and then she heard Drebes screaming. When Warn looked out, she said she saw a man holding a knife to Drebes' throat. Warn hurried into Quinton's room and urged her to call 911, but the man pushed his way inside and told them to hang up or he would hurt Drebes.

The man then hung up the phone. The 911 dispatcher called back and the man answered, saying that everything was fine and the call had been a mistake.

Warn said the intruder had an "in control but demanding" demeanor with the women in the apartment, switched to a "very relaxed voice" while speaking to the dispatcher, then resumed his original demanding attitude.

She said she particularly recalled that he was not wearing gloves when he handled the phone.

"I remember looking at his face and thinking, 'I'm not going to forget him, I'm not going to forget his eyes,' " Warn said. "Maybe I've seen too many crime shows, but I remember thinking there may be fingerprints (on the phone)."

The man threw a roll of duct tape onto the bed and told the women to tape themselves but then asked for their wallets. Warn got hers from the living room. He took it and Drebes' wallet and began to leave when Warn asked him if she could keep her identification.

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