Daniel Gudino had a sleepwalking problem that his entire family knew about, his younger brother testified today during his older brother’s first-degree murder trial.
In one incident, Alex Gudino said his brother Daniel chased him and an uncle into a bedroom and pounded on the door while sound asleep. Afterward Daniel was all sweaty when his parents woke him but he had no recall of the incident, the younger brother told jurors.
In other instances, Daniel Gudino would play guitar or urinate outside in the yard while asleep, his brother testified.
Daniel Gudino, 15, is on trial in juvenile court on charges of shooting to death his 9-year-old brother Ulysses Jr. and wounding their mother on May 18, 2009 inside the family’s home in the 1800 block of Chapel Hills Drive.
Prosecutors contend the attacks were intentional conscious acts. But Daniel Gudino’s public defenders claim the teen is mentally ill and may have been sleepwalking when he fired a .22 caliber rifle at his brother and then shot and stabbed his mother Marina Gudino.
Alex Gudino, 14, also testified that at least twice he thad used toothpicks to open the locked gun cabinet where the family kept its rifles, but that he never saw Daniel open the case. It wasn’t easy to undo the lock and it took about three minutes, he said.
Alex Gudino was at school on the morning when the shootings happened. But under questioning by his brother’s defense attorney, the 14-year-old described some of the dynamics of a family he described as loving, traditional and normal.
He also described an older brother who struggled with being afraid of the dark and seeing ghosts in a home he thought was haunted.
A 911 call for cereal
In mostly one or two word answers, he agreed with Deputy Public Defender Noreen Simpson that he and his two brothers and sister were brought up to be respectful of others. He would politely hold doors open and was not supposed to talk back. For the most part, they didn’t, he said.
He agreed with Simpson who said Ulysses could be “sometimes pesty” and that he was the most “dramatic” member of the family.
“He did things to get attention?” Simpson asked.
“Yes,” Alex Gudino replied.
“He did things to get you and Daniel in trouble?” she asked.
“Yes,” he replied.
Once Ulysses called 911 to report that Alex and Daniel would not let him have some cereal when their parents were not home, Simpson said. The police wound up contacting a neighbor, she said.
“He’s just doing what little brothers are supposed to do?” she asked.
“Pretty much,” Alex Gudino replied.
Sometimes the two older brothers would tease Ulysses and curse at him when their parents weren’t around, Simpson said.
“But you would never hurt him,” she asked.
“No,” Alex Gudino replied.
“And no one ever talked about hurting him?” she asked.
“No” he replied.
Still best friends
Daniel Gudino is about a year-and-a-half older than his brother Alex and is the oldest son in the family. But he didn’t quite fit into the role of first son, Simpson suggested.
“The oldest one is suppose to be the strong one?” she asked Alex.
“Yes,” he replied.
“Daniel was supposed to be the leader, the protector,” Simpson added. “It wasn’t that way, was it?”
“No. It wasn’t.” Alex replied.
He agreed with Simpson’s observations of the differences between the two oldest brothers. Alex was more outgoing. Daniel was shy. Alex had lots of friends. Daniel had a few.
“You’re kind of mouthy?” she asked.
“Yes,” he replied.
“Daniel was kind of gentle,” she said. “At school, you were the brother that took the lead.”
Again, Alex agreed.
“You and Daniel have always been very close,” she said.
“We were like best friends,” Alex replied.
“You’re still best friends,” she said.
“Yes,” he replied.
Testimony in the trial resumes this afternoon. Prosectors prosecutors plan to show the jury a videotaped interview of Alex Gudino done shortly after the shooting.
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