Oregon Man Accused of Murdering Newly-Wed Nurse is Evicted from His Apartment
UPDATE: Judge Turns Down Appeal to Unseal Documents Containing Details of Oregon Nurse Melissa Jubane Murder
Twenty-seven-year-old Bryce Schubert, who lived diagonally across the corridor from Beaverton nurse, Melissa Jubane, who was married in Hawaii two weeks earlier and who he is accused of murdering, has been evicted from his apartment.
Attorneys Cited ‘An Extremely Outrageous Act’ as the Reason for Eviction
Schubert, who has been in custody in the Washington County Jail since his arrest last month, was evicted from his apartment in the Baseline complex by attorneys citing ‘an extremely outrageous act’ as the reason for the eviction application.
The eviction also applies to a 24-year-old woman who shares the apartment with Schubert.
The lawsuit was filed by New York-based Sentinel Real Estate, an investment management fund that controls the sprawling apartment complex. The lawsuit lists substantial property damage and personal injury as justification for the eviction notice.
A Washington County Court judge approved the application on Monday. Schubert was not present for the hearing.
Bryce Schubert Lived Diagonally Across the Corridor from Melissa Jubane
According to a floor plan, Schubert occupied Unit 513 diagonally across the corridor from the murdered 32-year-old nurse.
Melissa Jubane locked the front door of her apartment at 6.22 a.m. on Wednesday, September 4, but failed to show up for work at the Providence St. Vincent Medical Center. Her car was later found parked in the complex garage at 1050 S.W. 160th Avenue.
Her disappearance sparked a massive search by volunteers and her body was found two days later.
Case details have been sealed by Washington County prosecutors.
The Murderer was ‘Deliberately cruel’
However, earlier this month they filed new court papers stating that Schubert was ‘deliberately cruel’ to Jubane during his violent act, adding that he cannot be rehabilitated.
Prosecutors have indicated that they will seek a sentence more severe than second-degree murder that carries a mandatory life sentence with the chance of parole after 25 years.
Schubert is accused of second-degree murder, first-degree kidnapping, and second-degree abuse of a corpse.
In a previous court appearance, Schubert pleaded not guilty to all three charges.
No bail application has been lodged on his behalf.