Posted on 04/15/2005 1:53:09 PM PDT by nuconvert
Mark Hacking Pleads Guilty to Murder
, April 15, 2005
SALT LAKE CITY Mark Hacking (search) has pleaded guilty to charges of murdering his wife.
The Utah man admitted shooting his wife, Lori Hacking (search), and dumping her body in a garbage bin.
There was speculation after Hacking was arrested that he would plead innocent by reason of insanity, after revelations of a series of bold lies he had told his family and a bizarre incident after he reported his wife missing that led to a stay in a psychiatric hospital.
Local newspapers reported that none of the possible key witnesses in the case were ever contacted by defense attorneys, signaling Hacking decided to avoid going to trial some time ago.
"There has been complete silence on all fronts," Deseret Morning News reporter Pat Reavy told FOX News. "Nothing has been filed in court in this case since October."
Lori Hacking's brother Paul Soares, who with other family members planned to attend the hearing, said he was not looking forward to seeing his brother-in-law.
"For 12 years this was a person I got along with, a person I loved," Soares told FOX News. "Now, looking back at what he's done, it's going to be really hard."
Erin Galbraith Huband, a close friend and former roommate of Lori Hacking, said before the court appearance she was relieved at news of the plea deal.
(Excerpt) Read more at foxnews.com ...
I read that the range of sentence he could get is between 6 years to life.
He'd damn well better get life.
With a name like Hacking, he was as good as convicted anyway.
Mark Hacking faces six years to life in
Hacking admits to killing wife
Updated: 4/15/2005 4:57 PM
By: Paul Foy, Associated Press
Mark Hacking faces six years to life in prison. SALT LAKE CITY -- A man accused of killing his wife after she learned that he lied about getting into medical school pleaded guilty to murder Friday, making a simple declaration to the judge: "I intentionally shot Lori Hacking in the head with a .22 rifle."
Prosecutors say Mark Hacking carried out the attack while his wife slept last July and then threw the body of the 27-year-old woman in a trash bin. Volunteers scouring a landfill found her decomposed remains about three months later.
The victim's father, Eraldo Soares, said hearing Hacking admit guilt in court "was just like a knife going right through my heart. I could not imagine that he could do that to Lori."
Prosecutors said the sentencing range will be from six years to life for Hacking, who appeared in court Friday with his hands cuffed behind his back and with a look of resignation.
Prosecutors said they will push for the maximum sentence.
"Under this charge, there is no possibility of probation. He will be going to prison," prosecutor Bob Stott said. "He pleaded guilty to murder, and that's what we were looking for. We were looking for the life sentence."
Hacking, a hospital orderly, pleaded guilty to first-degree murder. He also was charged with obstructing justice by disposing of the body, the gun and a bloody mattress, but those charges were dropped as part of Friday's deal.
Sentencing was scheduled for June 6.
Prosecutors were unable to determine if Lori Hacking was five weeks' pregnant, as she had told friends. That meant the husband could not be charged with a capital crime.
Lori Hacking's colleagues at a Wells Fargo brokerage house have said she broke down sobbing after learning of her husband's deception. She became aware of the lies after making calls to school administrators in North Carolina, where Hacking claimed he was enrolled for medical school. Hacking had also lied about graduating from the University of Utah.
Mark Hacking, 28, entered his plea after his lawyer showed no sign of preparing for a trial. The lawyer, Gilbert Athay, filed no motions, asked for none of the usual hearings that precede trials, and contacted no prosecution witnesses -- leading many to believe a plea deal was in the works.
That became more apparent when Judge Denise Lindberg scheduled another murder trial for the time Monday when she was to preside over Hacking's trial.
Mark Hacking was last in court Oct. 29, when he pleaded not guilty to all four charges.
Hacking had reported his wife missing to police, saying she had not returned from a morning jog in a Salt Lake park.
The news prompted a weeklong search for the former stockbroker's assistant by thousands of volunteers -- a search that echoed another sensational Salt Lake crime, the kidnapping of Elizabeth Smart from her bedroom.
Hacking was in a psychiatric hospital after suffering a breakdown when he confessed to his brothers that he killed his wife using a .22-caliber gun.
Lori's mother, Thelma Soares, wept as she talked to reporters after the hearing.
"I still have a lot of questions that are, have never been, addressed, and I need to get some answers from Mark," Soares said. "But that will have to be between Mark and me in the future at some point."
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