Florida's Orange County
Circuit Court Judge Marc Lubet has set a Dec. 7 trial
date for former astronaut Lisa Nowak.
A pretrial hearing is
scheduled for Nov. 10.
Investigators say Nowak
drove 1,000 miles from Houston to Orlando International Airport to allegedly
stalk
and attack love rival Colleen Shipman in the airport's blue parking lot in
the early-morning hours of Feb. 5, 2007. Nowak is charged with attempted
kidnapping, battery and attempted burglary with assault.
Shipman's attorney, Kepler Funk, said he is glad the case is finally going to
be heard -- nearly three years after the incident.
"The fact that it's
scheduled in 2009 is encouraging," Funk said sarcastically. But he added,
"I have been on both sides of wanting cases to move along faster than
others, and I've had cases where they take a significant amount of time to get
prepared. And I would never presume to know what (Nowak's attorney) thinks,
other than I'm confident he's advocating for his client 100 percent. I don't
fault him one iota. It is what it is, and we'll be there when they tell us to
be there."
The scheduling came about
Tuesday, when prosecutor Pam Davis and Nowak's attorney, Donald Lykkebak, both had unrelated business before Lubet, court spokeswoman Karen Levy said.
Lubet decided to handle the Nowak matter
then, as well.
A previously scheduled
status hearing for Friday was canceled.
Shipman told police that
Nowak had pepper-sprayed
her and tried to get into her car.
Nowak also carried with her
a duffel bag. Inside were a BB pistol, a 4-inch hunting knife, a rubber mallet,
garbage bags, latex gloves and surgical tubing. A receipt found in the bag
shows Nowak bought some of the items at a Sports Authority the day she left
Houston to travel to Orlando.
Nowak told detectives she
only wanted to talk with Shipman and had brought the items as a way to force
Shipman to sit with her and listen.
Both women were vying for
the affection of astronaut William Oefelein. NASA fired both Nowak
and Oefelein following the incident.
Lykkebak
filed a motion in April to dismiss the case after discovering a paramedic's
report that states Shipman "denied any direct contact with the pepper
spray and was not experiencing any burning sensation or any medical
problems."
The
paramedic arrived on the scene after Shipman already had cleaned her eyes out
with a wet paper towel. She was unaware of Nowak's identity until several hours
later, when a detective told her who had allegedly attacked her.
In addition, Lykkebak stated during a court hearing following Nowak's
arrest that his client had pepper-sprayed Shipman.
"What we have here is
a desperate woman who wants to have a conversation with another woman," Lykkebak said in court on Feb. 6, 2007. "She doesn't
shoot her. She doesn't stab her. She doesn't do anything except spray her with
pepper spray. She just wants to talk to her."
A hearing on the motion to
dismiss the case likely will be held before the November pretrial hearing.
At the time of the
incident, Nowak recently had separated from her husband, Richard. They have
since divorced.
Oefelein and Shipman live together in
Anchorage, Alaska, and run a freelance adventure-writing site on the Internet.
Nowak remains under court
order to stay away from the couple.
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