Follow Eurosport Australia on FacebookGet all the latest sports news directly on your wall 
How to get Eurosport
  • Foxtel
  • Transact
 
 
 
Tennis - US Open

US Open referee accused of killing husband

A prominent professional tennis referee who was preparing to officiate at the US Open in New York has been arrested on a felony murder warrant accusing her of bludgeoning her elderly husband to death with a coffee mug.

 
Referee accused of murder - Tennis - US OpenReuters
 

Lois Ann Goodman, 70, was taken into custody on a warrant filed a week ago by the Los Angeles County district attorney's office charging her with the April 17 slaying of her husband, Alan Goodman, who was 80 years old, prosecutors said.

The district attorney's office said Goodman would remain in custody in New York while awaiting extradition to Los Angeles, where she faces a maximum sentence of life in prison if convicted. Prosecutors said they would ask for bail to be set at $1 million.

She is accused of killing her husband by beating him to death with a coffee cup at the couple's home in the Woodland Hills section of Los Angeles.

According to Los Angeles police Lieutenant Dave Storaker, Goodman had called authorities to report that she found her husband dead in their home, with no sign of forced entry, and surmised he had fallen down some stairs after suffering a heart attack.

But details of her account immediately aroused suspicions, and police subsequently conducted several searches of the home for evidence, which included a broken coffee cup that roughly matched the multiple contusions on the victim's head.

Storaker said the coroner ruled the death a homicide on August 2. The case was presented to the district attorney and charges were filed. Since Goodman had left town by then for the US Open, Los Angeles police coordinated with homicide detectives in New York City to help make the arrest.

Storaker declined to discuss a suspected motive but said investigators were looking into "whether there were problems in their marriage."

Goodman is well known in tennis circles and was preparing to serve as a referee at the US Open, a district attorney's office spokeswoman, Jane Robison, said.

Goodman served mainly as a line judge, and had worked at the annual US Open for at least the past 10 years, said Tim Curry, a spokesman for the US Tennis Association, which owns the tournament.

Like all on-court officials, she worked as an independent contractor of the association, he said, adding she was arrested at her hotel before Tuesday's start of qualifying rounds. He said tournament officials were not aware she had been under suspicion in a murder investigation.

The main draw of the tournament, played at the USTA Billie Jean King National Tennis Center in Flushing, New York, opens on Monday with the men's and women's first-round matches.

     
     
     
    Do not miss
    • TV guide

      Find detailed TV schedules – click here.

    • Mobile Applications

      Find all the sports news on iPhone, BlackBerry, Android and iPad.

    • Eurosport eCalendar

      Download the latest Eurosport Australia TV schedules for your favourite sports FREE to your calendar. It's a simple three step process!

    Follow Eurosport.com
     
    On Facebook
     
    On Twitter
     
    On Mobile
    EurosportCopyright 2013
    Eurosport.com is available in other languages