Pubdate: Tue, 16 Dec 2008 Source: Tribune Review (Pittsburgh, PA) Copyright: 2008 Tribune-Review Publishing Co. Contact: http://www.pittsburghlive.com/x/pittsburghtrib/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/460 Authors: Jill King Greenwood and Jason Cato TAPES REFUTE 'PTA MOM' CASE Friends and relatives of Christina Korbe say she thinks of nothing but her children while she sits in jail on charges of killing an FBI agent and grieves for his family. But her words, taped during jailhouse phone calls and played during her federal detention hearing Monday, paint a different picture. Korbe, 40, of Indiana Township threatened to kill two people during calls and confessed to using cocaine. She joked with a relative about appearing on "Oprah" one day to talk about her ordeal. She told a cousin she is regarded as a hero and celebrity in the Allegheny County Jail. She called slain Special Agent Sam Hicks "the (expletive) cop. The one that died." "So they're gettin' all that public sympathy with him and his family, but what about my family?" Korbe said in a Nov. 24 phone call to a relative, lamenting that the Tribune-Review published a photo of Hicks, his wife and 2-year-old son but not one of her and her daughter. "She is not the person she claims to be," said Assistant U.S. Attorney Troy Rivetti. "She is not the PTA mom. She is not the pillar of the community." U.S. Magistrate Judge Robert C. Mitchell agreed with prosecutors that Korbe poses a danger to society and ordered her yesterday to remain jailed. She faces a possible life sentence if convicted in the Nov. 19 death of Hicks, whom she is accused of fatally shooting as he and other officers tried to arrest her husband on drug charges at their home. Mitchell said Christina Korbe would remain in custody for a number of reasons, including the seriousness of the charges and the recorded phone calls. She is charged with murder, assaulting federal officers and employees, and using a firearm during a violent crime. Defense attorney John Elash said his client was defending herself and her two children when she fired her gun early that morning because she did not know the people raiding her home were law enforcement officers. He said Korbe's comments were taken out of context. "You could understand people standing at a phone in the middle of a jail pod with other inmates around may speak differently," Elash told Mitchell. Rivetti characterized Korbe's actions as "callous, wanton disregard for human life." Korbe told a counselor at the jail that she "never used illicit drugs as an adult," Rivetti said. But in a Nov. 24 phone call to a relative, she is heard saying that a blood sample taken from her at the hospital the day of Hicks' shooting would contain evidence of cocaine use. "I told 'em that there was coke in it, and so what?" Korbe said on the tape. "I'm not lyin' about nothin'." During a Nov. 23 phone call to her cousin, Korbe said she wasn't concerned that her phone calls were recorded. "The FBI is listening to every (expletive) word I say," Korbe said. "This is ridiculous," replied her cousin, Carrie Ann Zacharias. "It is ridiculous. I don't know what the (expletive) they think I'm talking about, but all I'm tryin' to do is get ahold of my (expletive) kids. So they suck my (expletive) (expletive) (expletive). Listen to that!" She is then heard laughing. When talking to her father-in-law Nov. 24, Korbe bragged that other inmates told her they are "saying special prayers" for her. "How 'bout I got asked for my autograph today twice," she told Stephen Korbe, asking him to relay that to her husband, Robert Korbe. "He'll laugh." Robert Korbe, 39, is in the county jail on federal drug charges. Other calls recorded her threatening to kill her mother-in-law and an employee at her husband's Sharpsburg auto detailing business, who she said needs to "step up" and take the blame for a .38-caliber gun police seized at the business. During testimony from an FBI agent about the shooting, Christina Korbe clutched a pocket-sized Bible and held a large crucifix medallion around her neck, crying a few times. Several of her friends testified, including Heather Cullinan, who told the judge that her daughter and Korbe's 10-year-old girl, Taylor, are best friends. "She has all the qualities I want my children to be around," Cullinan said of Korbe. "They have never shown me any indication that she is not an exceptional mother and woman." Hicks' relatives left the courtroom without commenting. Before the hearing, some of Korbe's relatives held a protest outside U.S. District Court, Downtown. "She calls every chance she gets, to talk to the kids," said her brother, Gilbert Roland Jr. "Those kids are her life, and they are all she thinks about. She feels bad about what happened, but she doesn't deserve this. "She's being punished because the police don't want to admit they made a mistake by busting down her front door like that when she and her kids were in the house. What was she supposed to do? She got the gun because she thought her kids were in danger." - --- MAP posted-by: Larry Seguin