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Murder suspect told 911 dispatcher he retaliated to father’s attack

A man charged with murder called 911 and told a dispatcher he hit his father with a kitchen pot to defend himself against a knife attack

By Chad Sokol
The Spokesman-Review

PULLMAN, Wash. — During a frantic 911 call Saturday evening, Erik Luden said his father had attacked him with a knife before he retaliated, according to court documents.

“I responded,” Luden told the dispatcher. “I hit him with a pot in the head, a kitchen pot.”

Prosecutors are not convinced that Luden acted in self-defense and charged the 24-year-old with first-degree murder in the death of his father, Virgil Luden, 58, of Sammamish, Washington.

Police found Virgil Luden’s body shortly before 5 p.m. on the floor of a College Hill apartment.

Erik Luden, who lived at the apartment, requested an attorney and remained silent after his arrest. He is being held in the Whitman County Jail on a $500,000 bond.

When they arrived Saturday at the apartment, Pullman police found the younger Luden standing over his motionless father, court documents say.

Officers and paramedics tried to revive Virgil Luden before he was pronounced dead at the scene. His airways were blocked and his neck was a dark color, possibly indicating he was choked, and there was a small laceration on each eye, court documents say.

Officers found the metal pot beside Virgil Luden’s head and a bloody butter knife near his left hand. Blood was splattered on the floor and one wall. An autopsy was being performed Monday to confirm the cause of death.

Erik Luden was taken to Pullman Regional Hospital and treated for broken bones in his right hand and three cuts on his left forearm that doctors determined were self-inflicted, according to police reports.

A neighbor told detectives she had heard “a single loud ‘thump’ like a hammer on the floor,” followed by some tapping noises, around 4:30 p.m., court documents say. She didn’t hear any arguing and didn’t know anyone was with Erik Luden, who lived alone and usually was very quiet, she said.

The apartment at 960 NE C St. is in the middle of the College Hill neighborhood beside Washington State University. A property manager said “very few” people are living in the building during the summer break. Erik Luden is not listed as a student or employee in the university’s online directory. A cousin of his, Cara Freeman, 27, of Scottsdale, Arizona, said he once was a student but didn’t graduate.

Freeman said Virgil Luden went by Cliff – short for Clifford, his middle name.

“Uncle Cliff was a real professional in his mortgage business,” Freeman said. “Great reputation, very hard working, supported his wife and children.”

Virgil and Shannon Luden, 55, were married nearly 30 years and looking forward to retirement, Freeman said. They also had a daughter, Haley Luden, 21.

Police still are searching for a motive.

“I think we don’t have even a good working theory on that,” said police Cmdr. Chris Tennant.

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©2015 The Spokesman-Review (Spokane, Wash.)