Nathan Carman

Vt. Man Charged With Killing Mom at Sea Poses Flight Risk, Prosecutors Say

Nathan Carman is also accused of killing his grandfather, John Chakalos, who prosecutors say was shot in his home in Windsor, Connecticut, in 2013

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PROVIDENCE, RI – AUGUST 21: Nathan Carman ignores questions from the media upon his arrival at U.S. District Court for his federal civil trial in Providence, RI on Aug. 21, 2019. Nathan Carman took the stand Thursday in a closely watched federal lawsuit centering on the 2016 sinking of his boat and the mysterious loss of his mother at sea during that voyage. Carman, 25, of Vernon, Vt., took the stand just before 9:40 a.m. in federal court in Providence. On Wednesday, his detailed written account to insurers of his sunken vessel was admitted into evidence in the pitched dispute over his $85,000 claim for the loss of his boat. Carman told authorities he had been drifting in a life raft for a week when he was rescued about 115 miles off Marthas Vineyard by a passing freighter on Sept. 25, 2016. His mother, Linda, who was alone with him on the boat, is presumed dead. Carman is at the center of investigations into the deaths of his mother and his grandfather, who was shot in his Connecticut home in 2013. Carman hasnt been charged criminally in either case and has adamantly denied wrongdoing. (Photo by Nic Antaya for The Boston Globe via Getty Images)

Federal prosecutors say a Vermont man charged with killing his mother at sea in 2016 in a plot to inherit millions should remain behind bars pending trial because he poses a flight risk and danger to others.

The prosecutors filed a motion in U.S. District Court in Burlington, Vermont, on Friday, opposing a request by Nathan Carman to be released.

Carman, 28, who lives in Vernon, was charged in May with killing his mother, Linda Carman of Middletown, Connecticut, during a fishing trip in 2016 off the coast of New England in which his boat sank. He was found floating in a raft and rescued eight days after departing from a Rhode Island marina. He pleaded not guilty in May in his mother’s death.

Prosecutors also have accused Carman of killing his grandfather, John Chakalos, who they say was shot in his home in Windsor, Connecticut, in 2013 as part of a scheme to obtain money and property from his grandfather’s estate. Carman has not been charged in that case.

Nathan Carman, a 28-year-old who has been living in Vernon, Vermont, faces life imprisonment if he's convicted of the murder on the high seas charge.

Earlier this month, Carman’s lawyers filed a motion seeking his release, saying the evidence against him is “tenuous at best” and he does not pose a flight risk or danger. The lawyers said Carman is willing to surrender his passport, submit to electronic monitoring and turn over all the money he has — $10,000 — to a third party or post some of that money as bail.

Prosecutors wrote in opposing Carman’s motion on Friday that “Many of the claims made by Carman in support of his request for release are misleading or mistaken.”

“Carman’s motion for release fails to adequately address the risk of flight and similarly fails to address his dangerousness,” they wrote. “Moreover, the conditions of release he proposes would do little to mitigate these concerns.”

An email was sent to Carman’s public defenders seeking comment.

They wrote in the motion for release that he has never attempted to threaten or influence a witness and has led a quiet life in Vernon for the last eight years with solid ties to the community.

Michael Dwyer/AP
Nathan Carman arrives in a small boat at the US Coast Guard station, in Boston, Tuesday, Sept. 27, 2016. Carman is to be arraigned in federal court May 11, 2022, in Rutland, Vermont, on charges of killing his mother during a fishing trip at sea to inherit the family's wealth.

The prosecutors say Carman is a flight risk because he is charged with an offense that carries a mandatory life sentence and has few connections that would encourage him to stay in this country. They wrote that the letters Carman submitted in support of him are primarily from people who knew him as a child.

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