 Defense attorney Joseph
Tacopina, left, comforts Melanie McGuire after the verdict in her trial in
New Brunswick, N.J., Monday, April 23, 2007. McGuire was convicted of
killing her husband. [AP]  |
New Brunswick - A jury convicted a nurse
Monday of killing her husband, hacking up his body and stuffing the parts into
three suitcases she tossed into Chesapeake Bay.
Melanie McGuire, who sobbed as she heard the verdict, was convicted of
murder, desecration of a corpse, perjury and a weapons offense.
She was acquitted on two counts of hindering prosecution and falsifying
evidence. Authorities charged that she wrote anonymous letters in an attempt to
thwart investigators.
During the six-week trial, prosecutors said McGuire, 34, organized William
McGuire's 2004 murder using her expertise as a nurse so she could begin a new
life with her lover, her boss at a fertility clinic.
The Middlesex County jury was told that two days before her husband was last
seen alive, McGuire bought a gun and bullets that matched those found in her
husband's body.
The body parts of William McGuire, 39, a computer programmer, were found in
matching Kenneth Cole luggage that washed ashore in May 2004 near Norfolk, Va.,
nearly 300 miles from the couple's Woodbridge, N.J., apartment.
The verdict from the jury of nine women and three men came after about 13
hours of deliberations over four days.
McGuire's attorney, Joseph Tacopina, had argued that the petite nurse was
physically incapable of killing her 6-foot-3, 210-pound husband.
Assistant Attorney General Patricia Prezioso told jurors McGuire forged a
prescription for a powerful sedative, chloral hydrate, using the name of a
patient from her clinic April 28, 2004, the day her husband disappeared.
During his closing argument, Tacopina also said it would have been impossible
to carry out such a bloody crime in the couple's apartment without neighbors
hearing something and without leaving behind physical evidence.
Prezioso told jurors that McGuire most likely had an accomplice, but no one
has been named or charged. The prosecutor acknowledged that there were some
unanswered questions, but said there was still "overwhelming" evidence to
convict the mother of two.
Prosecutors also highlighted Internet searches made from the couple's
apartment on topics such as "undetectable poisons" and "ways to kill people."
Tacopina said the defense did not to call McGuire to the stand because the
jury had heard the key elements of what she had to say when audio recordings
made by two men close to her, who were cooperating with authorities, were played
in court.
The recordings were made by Dr. Bradley Miller, with whom she was having the
affair, and her good friend, James Finn. In the recordings, McGuire repeatedly
says she had nothing to do with her husband's death.
The defense portrayed William McGuire as a man with gambling debts who might
have been killed by a creditor.
Superior Court Judge Frederick DeVesa revoked McGuire's $1.2 million bail and
set sentencing for July 13. McGuire faces 30 years to life in prison on the
murder charge.
Tacopina said his client would appeal.
Prezioso said that "justice was served" but that she was saddened that the
McGuires' two children are now without both parents.