Melanie McGuire was convicted of the 2004 killing of her husband: what made the Melanie McGuire case so gruesome was that the former nurse cut up his body, placed it in trash bags and left it floating in Chesapeake Bay.
New Jersey fertility clinic nurse Melanie McGuire stands accused of murdering her husband, William, in 2004. Prosecutors allege that McGuire, 34, shot him to death, sliced his body into four pieces with a power saw and then dumped his remains in the Chesapeake Bay. McGuire maintains her innocence, and her defense attorneys have suggested the victim’s slaying was related to gambling debts.
That defense didn’t work as Melanie McGuire was indeed found guilty.
In what is sure to be a controversial verdict, a jury convicted fertility clinic nurse Melanie McGuire on Monday in the 2004 murder of her husband, whose dismembered remains were stuffed into the couple’s set of luggage and thrown in the Chesapeake Bay. Throughout the ordeal, Melanie maintained her innocence and claimed she had been set up.
According to Court TV:
In addition to charges of first-degree murder and desecrating human remains, the panel found, 34, guilty of perjury for lying to a family court judge about her husband’s whereabouts after he disappeared. They also convicted her of unlawful possession of a weapon.McGuire was acquitted, however, of four charges related to anonymous letters mailed to authorities in an alleged attempt to throw suspicion onto others. She faces 30 years to life in prison on the murder charge alone when she is sentenced July 13. Her bond was immediately revoked after the verdict.
There was some thought that Melanie McGuire might get a retrial and that does remain a (distant) possibility. That’s pretty much her only way out of jail though, Melanie McGuire has just been sentenced.
A New Jersey judge rejected claims of innocence from a nurse who was convicted of killing and dismembering her husband and sentenced her to life Thursday for his death.
"The depravity of this murder simply shocks the conscience of this court," Middlesex Superior Court Judge Frederick De Vesa said as he gave Melanie McGuire the maximum penalty. "One who callously destroys a family to accomplish her own selfish ends must face the most severe consequences that the law can provide."
McGuire was visibly distraught as she listened to the judge. Her lawyers had asked for the minimum sentence of 30 years for the murder count.
A jury convicted McGuire in April of four counts, including first-degree murder, stemming from the death of William McGuire, a 39-year-old computer analyst who was last seen alive April 28, 2004.
McGuire also received 10 years for desecrating human remains, to be served concurrently, and an additional five years on one count of perjury for lying to a family court judge regarding the whereabouts of her husband after his disappearance.
In an agreement among the lawyers, De Vesa merged one count of unlawful possession of a weapon with the murder count.
McGuire will be eligible for parole after serving 85 percent of her sentence, or when she is 100 years old, according to calculations from the state attorney’s office.
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