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Letter shows Lori's heartache
Salt Lake Tribune ^
|
2004-08-12
| Matthew D. LaPlante
Posted on 08/12/2004 6:38:29 AM PDT by MizSterious
Letter shows Lori's heartache
Typewritten note among early findings that made police suspicious
By Matthew D. LaPlante
The Salt Lake Tribune
Salt Lake Tribune
2004-08-12 02:03:46.427
On the day Mark Hacking reported his wife missing, police found a letter in which she pleaded for him to change his ways.
"I want to grow old with you, but I can't do it under these conditions," she wrote.
The typewritten letter was found on a shelf in a spare bedroom of the couple's apartment about the same time an officer pulled a blood-stained hunting knife from a bedside drawer.
Within hours, police were confident that Lori Hacking had been murdered.
Found during a routine search of the Hackings' apartment on July 19, the letter indicates Lori was troubled by her marriage, which friends and family members had described as nearly perfect.
"I hate coming home from work because it hurts to be home in our apartment," she wrote. "I can't imagine life with you if things don't change . . . I got someone I don't want to spend the rest of my life with unless changes are made."
Although police do not know when the letter was written, it could relate to Lori's July 16 discovery that Mark had been lying about his educational ventures.
The letter was one of scores of items cataloged in four search warrants made public Wednesday afternoon in 3rd District Court.
Among the most potentially damaging items seized was a pillow with a "washed out brownish colored stain" found in the Dumpster behind the Hackings' apartment complex. Mark would later tell his brothers he shot his wife with a .22-caliber rifle as she slept.
The knife, according to prosecutors, was used to cut off the top of the couple's mattress. Detectives recovered the mattress from a Dumpster in a nearby church parking lot but have not found the top.
According to the search warrants, police were immediately suspicious of Mark's purchase of a queen-size mattress just minutes after he called them in a panic to report Lori missing.
When asked about that purchase, he allegedly told investigators he had thrown out the old mattress a month earlier because his wife had bled on it during menstruation.
Employing several warrants on multiple days, starting the day Lori vanished, investigators searched the Hackings' vehicles, their apartment and the psychiatric institute where Mark worked. They also took fingerprints and samples of Mark's blood.
Their collections - from a blood-stained carpet sample to DNA samples from Lori's underclothing - prompted the Salt Lake County district attorney to charge Mark Hacking with first-degree felony murder and obstruction of justice Monday. Mark Hacking's July 24 confession to his brothers also was a major basis for the charges.
District Attorney David Yocom said he believes the evidence is sufficient to prove Mark Hacking's guilt without two other key pieces of evidence: Lori's body and the murder weapon.
Nonetheless, investigators plan to return tonight to a west Salt Lake County landfill to continue searching for Lori's remains and the weapon. It will be the tenth night of searching the 3,000-ton pile of trash collected and dumped on July 19 and early July 20.
Salt Lake City police spokesman Dwayne Baird said the search - and all other investigative efforts - will now fall under the direction of county prosecutors, though he doesn't believe any changes have been directed.
"As far as I know, we're doing the same thing," he said.
In past efforts, excavators using a backhoe have separated small portions of the refuse from the pile in order to give cadaver dogs from Duchesne County a better chance to sense human remains.
Meanwhile, police officers and other emergency personnel have scanned the trash seeking "landmark" pieces of refuse that might indicate they are approaching the trash that was collected near the Hackings' apartment and the University Neuropsychiatric Institute, where Mark Hacking worked as an orderly and allegedly dumped his wife's body.
UNI employees told The Salt Lake Tribune that investigators expressed interest in surveillance tapes recorded the morning of Lori's disappearance. A security-camera company executive told The Associated Press that police are starting to review images taken by 16 motion-sensitive closed-circuit cameras in and around the institute.
Baird downplayed reports that the tapes show Mark Hacking putting his wife's body into a Dumpster. "I'm guessing that it's not what they think it is," he said.
The search warrants show that police were investigating Lori Hacking's disappearance as a homicide from the beginning, despite repeated public pronouncements that it was a "missing person" case and that Mark Hacking was simply a "person of interest."
As thousands of searchers prepared to muster at City Creek Canyon, where Hacking claimed his wife went for a morning jog without returning, Detective Vic Siebeneck was asking for a warrant from state Magistrate Timothy Hanson.
In the application, Siebeneck wrote that he believed a search of the Hackings' cars and apartment would produce "weapons, implements, tools and other fruits or instrumentalities of the crime of homicide."
mlaplante@sltrib.com
TOPICS: Crime/Corruption; Culture/Society; News/Current Events; US: Utah
KEYWORDS: hacking; letter; liar; lori; lying; mark; murder; richfantasylife; wifekiller
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To: MizSterious
Were her fingerprints on the note?
To: Bonaparte; the Deejay; spectre; Jaded; SheLion; Grig; lady lawyer; Utah Girl; pinz-n-needlez; ...
Lori Hacking pinglist--if anyone wants on or off, let me know via freepmail!
3
posted on
08/12/2004 6:42:03 AM PDT
by
MizSterious
(First, the journalists, THEN the lawyers.)
To: MizSterious
A typewritten note to someone you live with? Huh?
4
posted on
08/12/2004 6:43:44 AM PDT
by
sarasota
To: coconutt2000
Good question. I wondered on another thread if this could be something Mark wrote to explain her "disappearance." Wonder if he's a good forger?
5
posted on
08/12/2004 6:44:15 AM PDT
by
MizSterious
(First, the journalists, THEN the lawyers.)
To: MizSterious
Thank you for the ping :) Was waitin. Doesn't this just beat all. You know with the english that is used in this letter I would almost think it was him. She strikes me as a person whose english would be a little better than that.
6
posted on
08/12/2004 6:44:29 AM PDT
by
Rabbit29
(Lord...help these ill people.)
To: sarasota
Thanks for encouraging me to reread this one and some of the other articles on the topic--I thought it said "handwritten" but that was in the Deseret News article--and the only thing they are saying was handwritten was on the envelope. Hmmm.
7
posted on
08/12/2004 6:47:02 AM PDT
by
MizSterious
(First, the journalists, THEN the lawyers.)
To: MizSterious
Explain something about our criminal justice system...
I can understand continuing to look for her body.
But since he confessed, why can't the police simply wrap this up and help the family (families) put this behind them?
Why the ongoing investigation and evidence gathering?
To: sarasota; Rabbit29; coconutt2000; All
From the Deseret News--
Friends and family had described the Hackings' marriage as a loving one, but the folded letter with the word "Mark" handwritten on the cover may tell a different story.
This brings me back to: how do we know she wrote this letter? Wouldn't it have been just as easy for him to have found an old greeting card envelope, type this thing up with really bad grammar, and try to use it to explain her "disappearance?"
9
posted on
08/12/2004 6:50:12 AM PDT
by
MizSterious
(First, the journalists, THEN the lawyers.)
To: MizSterious
This case just gets more heart wrenching as the days go by.
I'm praying they find her body soon so her family can lay her to rest....
10
posted on
08/12/2004 6:50:13 AM PDT
by
Jackie-O
To: All
11
posted on
08/12/2004 6:51:52 AM PDT
by
MizSterious
(First, the journalists, THEN the lawyers.)
To: harrycarey
But since he confessed, why can't the police simply wrap this up and help the family (families) put this behind them? Why the ongoing investigation and evidence gathering?He could always plead not guilty and his lawyer could seek to have the confession thrown out. Never know what might happen in the crapshoot that is our judicial process.
12
posted on
08/12/2004 6:52:33 AM PDT
by
Maceman
(Too nuanced for a bumper sticker)
To: harrycarey
He's confessed, but apparently his lawyer is going to try to get the confession thrown out. Right now, this looks like it's going to go to trial, even though there were rumors that the families would work out a deal. I hope his family realizes that his lawyer will drain them of all their worldly goods before this is over, and he'll probably be convicted anyway.
13
posted on
08/12/2004 6:54:17 AM PDT
by
MizSterious
(First, the journalists, THEN the lawyers.)
To: Maceman
Or he can change the method with which he killed her in a follow up confession, confusing the matter. The body will provide lots of definitive evidence, at least we hope.
To: MizSterious
Trials become the playground of lawyers (like Kerry and Edwards). It's not about the accused. It's about the legal gymnastics of the liars...I mean lawyers.
15
posted on
08/12/2004 6:58:07 AM PDT
by
sarasota
To: harrycarey
Why the ongoing investigation and evidence gathering? I'm assuming because you can NEVER have enough evidence when dealing with a sociopathic murderer. He could recant his confession. I'm glad to hear LE is covering all the bases to ensure this monster never walks the streets as a free man again.
16
posted on
08/12/2004 6:59:11 AM PDT
by
LisaMalia
(In Memory of Sgt. James W."Billy" Lunsford..KIA 11-29-69 Binh Dinh S. Vietnam)
To: sarasota
Type written or computer generated? It's possible. People spend so much time on the computer. My kid IM's her friends and calls it talking. Besides, I know someone going through a divorce that documents things in a word doc and has recently been using it to express feelings. An electronic diary as it were, takes less time than long hand plus there is spell check.
17
posted on
08/12/2004 7:01:03 AM PDT
by
Jaded
((Clothes make the man. Naked people have little or no influence on society. - Mark Twain))
To: Jaded
18
posted on
08/12/2004 7:03:33 AM PDT
by
glock rocks
(WHat are you? omnipivoyant or sumthin?)
To: MizSterious
If Mark's family takes this to trail, they deserve to go broke.
sw
19
posted on
08/12/2004 7:07:51 AM PDT
by
spectre
(Spectre's wife)
To: spectre
20
posted on
08/12/2004 7:09:30 AM PDT
by
spectre
(Spectre's wife)
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