A woman accused of attempting to destroy evidence in the Susan Brock child molestation case accepted a plea deal this morning that will likely keep her out of jail.
Christian Weems, an old friend of the incarcerated estranged wife of Maricopa County Supervisor Fulton Brock, pleaded guilty to one misdemeanor charge of computer tampering.
Initially, Weems was hit with five felony counts including
hindering prosecution, tampering with evidence, and obstruction of a
criminal investigation for allegedly trying to destroy incriminating emails stored in
Brock's victim's email account.
According to court documents obtained by New Times,
Brock and the victim would often coordinate meeting times by writing
drafts of emails and saving them in the victim's email account. Brock
had access to the account and could check messages left by the victim
and leave her own for him.
Because the emails were only drafts, they were
never sent and wouldn't appear in the victim's "sent box." Court docs
state Brock told the victim to do it this way to avoid being detected by
his parents.
On November 2, after Weems had visited Brock in
jail, Brock called her from the clink and the two had a conversation
where Weems tries to get Brock to tell her some sort of password
using code-talk about a trip the two on to California.
"I have a
question," Weems said to Brock during the conversation, "do you remember
when you and I went to California and when we went to that, that, you
and I and all the girls we went to the beach house and you had to have a
password to get in the gate, do you remember what that is?"
At first, Brock seemed confused by the question, but later, after some hints from Weems, seemed to figure it out.
Brock
then rattled off a password -- supposedly to get into a gate at the beach
house in California -- which happened to be the same password to the
victim's email account.
Chandler Sergeant Joe Favazzo told New Times at the time of her arrest that it's unlikely Weems knew about the molestation before Brock's arrest,
but says the two saw each other at the jail before to the phone
conversation about the password.
It seems Brock told Weems about
the email account and password in a prior conversation. Being a good
friend, Weems, it appears, was going to delete some incriminating emails
stored in the boy's account.
After Weems had the password, she
told Brock "thank you, um OK so thank you, I need that in order to take
care of some things and be able to get into it, so thank you."
Weems is scheduled to be sentenced on October 7, by Maricopa County Superior Court Judge Joseph Kreamer.