Raheem Cherry Murders Laura Miles In Virginia

Raheem Cherry is a teen killer from Virginia who was convicted of the murder of Laura Miles

According to court documents sixty one year old Laura Miles was getting into her truck in Chesapeake Virginia when she would be attacked by nineteen year old Raheem Cherry

Laura Miles who was on the phone with her husband at the time would be fatally stabbed by Raheem Cherry

Raheem Cherry would steal the vehicle which would be recovered later. He would leave behind fingerprints on the vehicle which would lead to his arrest

Raheem Cherry would be convicted and will be sentenced at a later time where he faces a life sentence

Raheem Cherry Case

A Chesapeake man was found guilty Friday of murdering, robbing and abducting a woman from New York state who was staying in the same apartment complex as him.

The jury deliberated for about three hours before convicting Raheem Cherry of all charges, including first-degree murder. Sentencing was set for July. Cherry, who was 19 when the crimes were committed, could get up to two life terms plus 15 years.

The slaying occurred around 5 a.m. on May 17, 2021, at the Taylor Bend apartment complex in Western Branch.

Laura Miles, 61, a resident of upstate New York who spent weeks at a time in Chesapeake as a safety supervisor at Craney Island, was attacked immediately after she stepped into her Ford F150 in the complex’s parking lot, according to prosecutors. She’d been talking on the phone with her husband, who told police he heard a scream and then a struggle. He also got texts from her phone moments later that he said were out of character for her.

Officers discovered Miles’ truck on the other side of the complex later that day. Soon after, they found her body in a ditch near the Taylor Bend YMCA. A medical examiner determined Miles had been stabbed 11 times.

A detective who saw Cherry walking back and forth in the area where the truck was found stopped him for questions, then let him go. Cherry became a suspect after fingerprints found on the truck and Miles’ phone were determined to have come from him.

Cherry denied any involvement, then later told detectives he was “somewhat” involved. He said that on that morning, he’d smoked marijuana in a car in the parking lot with a man he’d never seen before. He said the man told him he wanted to rob someone, and showed him a gun and a knife.

When Miles came out of her apartment and got into her truck, the man ran over and attacked her, Cherry told police. He said the man then forced him at gunpoint to help dump Miles’ body, dispose of her belongings and clean the truck.

“None of this makes any sense, ladies and gentleman,” Deputy Commonwealth’s Attorney D.J. Hansen told jurors during closing arguments. “It doesn’t make sense because it never happened.”

Cherry testified in his own defense, telling jurors he initially lied to police because he didn’t trust them. He also said that he didn’t attempt to run away, or report what had happened, because he was afraid.

Defense attorney Amanda Newins pointed to doorbell video footage that showed Cherry in the area, and then a minute later another man wearing different clothes in the same area.

“We know there was someone else there,” Newins told jurors. “We know that because there is video footage showing there is someone else there.”

Newins also questioned prosecutors’ assertion that Cherry had sent the texts to Miles’ husband. The only prints found for him were from his pinky and middle fingers, not typically ones used to type. Cherry said his prints were there because he touched the phone while helping the other man clean the truck.

The defense lawyer also pointed to the fact that no blood was found on the clothes Cherry was seen wearing in the video, and that a partial DNA sample located on Miles’ arm was ruled to have come from two different men. There wasn’t enough evidence, however, to determine who the men were.

https://news.yahoo.com/chesapeake-man-found-guilty-fatally-130300677.html

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Elizabeth Haysom Murders Parents

Elizabeth Haysom and her boyfriend Jens Soring are two killers from Virginia who were convicted of the murders of her parents Derek and Nancy Haysom

According to court documents the bodies of Derek and Nancy Haysom were found inside of their Lynchburg, Virginia. The two had both been slashed and stabbed repeatedly

Soon after suspicion began to fall on Elizabeth Haysom and Jens Soring who had fled to England soon after the funeral would be arrested and extradited back to the United States to stand trial for murder

Elizabeth Haysom would plead guilty to two counts of accessory to murder and was sentenced to ninety years in prison

Jens Soring would plead not guilty, be convicted at trial and be sentenced to ninety years in prison

The pair would both be paroled in 2019 having served more than thirty years in prison. Elizabeth Haysom was immediately deported to Canada. Jens Soring would be deported to Germany

Elizabeth Haysom Videos

ELIZABETH HAYSOM & JENS SOERING - A BRUTAL DOUBLE MURDER OF THE HAYSOM FAMILY

Elizabeth Haysom Case

A violent crime that horrified Nova Scotians nearly 40 years ago is being revisited in a new Netflix documentary.

The four-part series, Till Murder Do Us Part: Soering vs. Haysom, was released earlier this month. It follows the 1985 double-murder of Derek Haysom — a former president and chairman of the Sydney Steel Corporation (Sysco) in Nova Scotia — and his wife Nancy at their home in Virginia, and the ensuing media firestorm that followed in the wake of their deaths.

The killings were particularly brutal, with both victims stabbed multiple times and their throats slashed.

But what happened next is why people are still talking about the crime today.

The couple’s daughter Elizabeth Haysom, who grew up in Nova Scotia, and her boyfriend, Jens Soering, the son of a West German diplomat who she met in residence at the University of Virginia, were charged in the murders.

Not long after the killings, the couple fled to Europe, where they were picked up nearly a year later for attempting to pass bad cheques.

While in custody, British officials found letters Elizabeth Haysom had written to Soering implicating them in the murders, and contacted Virginia police.

According to a New Yorker article from 2015, Soering initially confessed to committing the murders because he wrongly assumed he would be protected by diplomatic immunity, and later recanted. He said only that he lied to prevent his girlfriend from facing the death penalty.

Elizabeth Haysom pleaded guilty to two counts of accessory to murder before the fact and was sentenced to 90 years in prison. Soering, who ended up pleading not guilty, was convicted and sentenced to two consecutive life terms for executing the killings.

In the ensuing decades, each has remained steadfast in claiming the other carried out the murders.

The docuseries, which Soering participated in but Elizabeth Haysom declined to be interviewed for, contrasts their claims in an attempt to discover who is telling the truth.

The series mentions Derek Haysom’s connection to Sysco, but doesn’t explore the family’s connection to Nova Scotia.

Born in South Africa, he held a variety of influential positions during his time in Nova Scotia, including at Sysco, a Crown corporation. Later, he became president of Metropolitan Area Growth Investments (MAGI), a venture capital organization with provincial and federal funding that made investments in local businesses.

While working for MAGI, Derek Haysom was involved in the controversial purchase of a Bermuda-registered cruise ship that was renamed the Mercator One.

The plan was to operate cruises out of Atlantic Canada in the summer months, and through the Caribbean in the winter. But the purchase was a boondoggle from the start, with the boat losing money down south, and never once operating in Canada.

Questions about its financing were raised in the provincial legislature, setting off a scandal that contributed to the electoral defeat of Premier Gerald Regan’s Liberal government in 1978.

Mercator One was sold the following year for half of what it was originally purchased for, with the provincial government estimating it lost between $8 million and $9 million on the venture.

After Derek Haysom retired in the 1980s, he and Nancy moved to Virginia. But they remained connected to the province and had a summer home near Lunenburg.

In an article published by the Globe and Mail shortly after the murders, neighbours on the South Shore said Derek Haysom was a nice guy with a special interest in cars who enjoyed driving his BMW. He had also gained some renown locally for his attempts to “produce a new strain of apple” on his property.

The article also quoted one of Derek Haysom’s former Sysco colleagues, Harvey MacLeod, who remembered him as an athletic family man who loved spending time with Nancy and his six children.

MacLeod called the murders “shocking” and questioned why anyone would have wanted to kill Derek Haysom.

In 2016, Elizabeth Haysom told the Richmond Times-Dispatch in Virginia that she was “profoundly ashamed” of her role in the crime.

After more than 30 years in prison, both she and Soering were released on parole in 2019 and deported to their home countries of Canada and Germany, respectively.

Soering continues to proclaim his innocence, claiming that he took the fall for his girlfriend. Elizabeth Haysom maintains she ordered him to carry out the murders.

https://www.cbc.ca/news/canada/nova-scotia/netflix-true-crime-series-till-murder-do-us-part-1.7022130

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Kassceen Weaver Murders 10 Yr Old Son

Kassceen Weaver is a convicted killer from Virginia for the murder of his ten year old son

According to court documents Kassceen Weaver would call his wife and tell her that their ten year old son had stopped breathing. Instead of calling for help Weaver would leave the body of his son in his crib for days until the corpse began to smell, Weaver would then put the body into a freezer. Eventually Weaver wife’s brother would call the police to report the ten year old boy missing. Authorities would search the home and find the body of the ten year old

Kassceen Weaver would be arrested, convicted and sentenced to thirty five years in prison with parole eligibility after twenty years

Kassceen Weaver Case

Former University of Richmond basketball star Kassceen “Kass” Weaver was sentenced to 20 years in prison connected to the neglect and death of his three-year-old son Adon and the concealment of the child’s body in the family’s freezer.

Weaver, 51, was convicted earlier this year on all the charges against him, including felony murder, felony child abuse/neglect, and aggravated malicious wounding charges, and faced a maximum of 55 years.

When Adon suffered some sort of medical emergency on the night of Oct. 23, 2018, prosecutors said Weaver failed to seek appropriate medical attention for his child.

They said Weaver then stored the child’s body in a freezer for several years to hide what happened and to prevent his other son from being taken away.

Weaver’s defense team had argued that no one knew what medical emergency Adon suffered that night and could not say if calling 911 would have made a difference.

They added that Weaver said he had attempted CPR, something his wife did to revive Adon when he stopped breathing over a week before.

Weaver did not address the court during the 30-minute hearing on Thursday due to the fact he still faces an aggravated malicious wounding charge involving his now ex-wife.

That case is set for trial in March 2024.

Kass Weaver played college basketball at the University of Richmond from 1992 to 1995.

https://www.wtvr.com/news/local-news/kass-weaver-sentenced-dec-21-2023

Kassceen Weaver News

former University of Richmond basketball star was sentenced Thursday to 20 years in prison after he was convicted of killing his 3-year-old son and hiding the boy’s remains in a freezer for more than two years.

A Chesterfield County jury in July found Kassceen “Kass” Weaver, 51, guilty on charges of homicide, concealing a dead body and child neglect in the Oct. 23, 2018, death of his son Adon.

Weaver declined to give a statement at the sentencing and stated his intent to appeal.

The exact circumstances surrounding Adon’s death remain unclear, but prosecutors said the child suffered multiple broken bones, including a fractured skull and humerus, on the night that he died. Despite his “clear medical distress,” Weaver did not take Adon to the hospital or call 911, prosecutors said.

“Adon was a helpless child,” said Chesterfield Assistant Commonwealth’s Attorney Joshua Loren. “And (Weaver) refused to do anything.”

By the time Adon’s mother, Dina D. Weaver, returned home that evening, the boy was already dead, Loren said.

Prosecutors said Weaver put Adon’s body in a crib for several days before “it started to smell,” at which point he placed the body in a vacuum-sealed bag and stored it in a freezer in the home. The family lived in the 6400 block of Lookout Point Circle in Midlothian.

Court records indicate that the investigation into Adon’s death began after Dina Weaver’s brother alerted police to Adon’s disappearance. Weaver was arrested in December 2021, over two years after putting Adon’s body in the freezer.

Loren on Thursday asked Judge Edward Robbins to sentence Weaver to 55 years in prison under the maximum sentencing guidelines. He said Weaver’s behavior was “depraved, reprehensible (and) just evil.”

Weaver’s attorneys argued that Adon’s death was “not a typical second-degree murder.”

Kassceen Weaver’s defense team, led by Russ Stone, said Adon had had an “underlying medical condition” that contributed to his death and ultimately “caused him to stop breathing.” They described Weaver’s crimes as “acts of omission, not commission.”

“This is a very different situation from … malicious murder,” Weaver’s attorney said.

Kassceen Weaver’s attorneys added that Weaver was grieving the loss of his son and was hopeful for an opportunity to redeem himself.

Prosecutors rejected the defense’s claims.

“There has been no accountability or remorse shown,” said Loren, adding that the incident was part of a broader pattern of abuse and denial of medical care by Weaver.

Loren also said Kassceen Weaver’s victims included people other than Adon.

In a victim impact statement read to the court, Adon’s grandmother lamented the fact that she would never truly get to know her grandson. In another statement, Adon’s brother said he was in foster care, attending therapy and having panic attacks due to the trauma of the incident.

Adon’s brother is now “missing his brother to grow up with, to play sports with,” Loren said. “These are the things the defendant took away from him.”

The 6-foot-3 Kassceen Weaver was a two-year basketball starter as a guard at UR after transferring from Wisconsin. Weaver averaged 14.1 points as a junior in 1993-94. After averaging 17.8 points as a senior in 1994-95, he was named first-team All-Colonial Athletic Association. Weaver was a Spiders’ co-captain as a senior.

Bill Dooley, who coached Kassceen Weaver at UR, said near the conclusion of Weaver’s senior season: “He’s our go-to guy. We go to him when we need a basket. We go to him when we need to get the ball inbounds. We go to him when we need to break a press. We go to him when we need to stop the other team’s best player. We go to him for everything.”

Kassceen Weaver as a senior was one of the Spiders’ few experienced players on an 8-20 team that frequently used five freshmen and a sophomore center, Rick Edwards, who is now Richmond’s police chief. Weaver, who graduated with a finance degree, went on to play professionally in Poland.

https://richmond.com/news/local/crime/former-university-richmond-chesterfield-basketball-star-sentenced-for-killing-son-concealing-body-in-freezer/article_79881aaa-a030-11ee-8fbd-1b8287a1673e.html

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Emily DeFries Murders Toddler In VA

Emily DeFries is a killer from Virginia who was convicted of the murder of twenty month old Anna Belle

According to court documents paramedics would rush to the Virginia home where they would find twenty month old Anna Belle unresponsive. The toddler was rushed to the hospital but would however pass away soon after.

According to prosecutors Emily DeFries shook and slammed the toddler which would cause her death

According to defense attorneys Anna Belle older sister, who was eight at the time, accidentally caused the toddlers death

Emily DeFries would tell the court that she had nothing to do with the death of Anna Belle however the jury would find the woman guilty and she would be sentenced to twenty years in prison

Emily DeFries Videos

Emily Defries discusses conviction in prison interview

Emily DeFries Now

Personal Information Emily Elyse Defries

Age/Race/Sex

33/White/Female

Location Fluvanna Correctional Center

Inmate I.D.# 1627829

Release Date 01/26/2032

Emily DeFries Case

Emily Defries has been found guilty of the murder of her ex-fiance’s 20-month-old daughter.

She has been charged with second degree murder.

The jury recommended 20 years for the conviction of one count of second degree murder. Her formal sentencing is scheduled for January.

Defries plead not guilty to malicious wounding and murder charges on Monday.

A former medical examiner said that 20-month-old Anna Belle was not shaken to death, but hit with something that has a large, flat surface on Wednesday.

The man is now a private consultant and defense witness for lawyers representing Emily Defries

The defense attorney showed pictures of a bunk bed in the room of the baby girl’s then 8-year-old sister in court on September 30.

murder of 20-month-old
By: S. Cline , Gabriella DeLuca
Posted at 12:04 PM, Sep 28, 2015
and last updated 4:52 PM, Oct 01, 2015

Norfolk, Va. – Emily Defries has been found guilty of the murder of her ex-fiance’s 20-month-old daughter.

She has been charged with second degree murder.

The jury recommended 20 years for the conviction of one count of second degree murder. Her formal sentencing is scheduled for January.

Defries plead not guilty to malicious wounding and murder charges on Monday.

A former medical examiner said that 20-month-old Anna Belle was not shaken to death, but hit with something that has a large, flat surface on Wednesday.

The man is now a private consultant and defense witness for lawyers representing Emily Defries

Recent Stories from wtkr.com

The defense attorney showed pictures of a bunk bed in the room of the baby girl’s then 8-year-old sister in court on September 30.

The consultant said the flat stairs of the bunk bed could have caused the deadly injury to her head.

This goes against what the doctor who performed the autopsy on the baby told a courtroom on September 24, 2014: “The child most likely died from being shaken and slammed.”

The Commonwealth’s attorney fired back at the defense doctor, questioning his credibility.

She referred to him as a “professional expert witness” for defense attorneys and called him out for charging $4,000 to testify, in addition to several hundred dollars an hour to review the case.

The consultant said that money is partly for his travel expenses and waking up at 4:00 a.m. to come to the trial.

Throughout the trial, the defense attorney has implied that Anna’s big sister is responsible for the baby’s death.

The 8-year-old sister of the toddler, who was allegedly murdered, testified in court on Tuesday.

On Monday, the defense attorney implied that all of the bruises found on the toddler were caused by the 8-year-old.

The attorney said the two had a very violent relationship, and she was the one responsible for killing the baby.

However, 24-year-old Emily Defries is accused of killing her boyfriend’s 20-month-old daughter at their Norfolk home last year.

NewsChannel 3 reporter Gabriella DeLuca was in the courtroom when the 8-year-old girl testified as witness during her baby sister’s murder trial.

The girl had a Kleenex in one hand and a stuffed animal in the other.

murder of 20-month-old
By: S. Cline , Gabriella DeLuca
Posted at 12:04 PM, Sep 28, 2015
and last updated 4:52 PM, Oct 01, 2015

Norfolk, Va. – Emily Defries has been found guilty of the murder of her ex-fiance’s 20-month-old daughter.

She has been charged with second degree murder.

The jury recommended 20 years for the conviction of one count of second degree murder. Her formal sentencing is scheduled for January.

Defries plead not guilty to malicious wounding and murder charges on Monday.

A former medical examiner said that 20-month-old Anna Belle was not shaken to death, but hit with something that has a large, flat surface on Wednesday.

The man is now a private consultant and defense witness for lawyers representing Emily Defries

Recent Stories from wtkr.com

The defense attorney showed pictures of a bunk bed in the room of the baby girl’s then 8-year-old sister in court on September 30.

The consultant said the flat stairs of the bunk bed could have caused the deadly injury to her head.

This goes against what the doctor who performed the autopsy on the baby told a courtroom on September 24, 2014: “The child most likely died from being shaken and slammed.”

The Commonwealth’s attorney fired back at the defense doctor, questioning his credibility.

She referred to him as a “professional expert witness” for defense attorneys and called him out for charging $4,000 to testify, in addition to several hundred dollars an hour to review the case.

The consultant said that money is partly for his travel expenses and waking up at 4:00 a.m. to come to the trial.

Throughout the trial, the defense attorney has implied that Anna’s big sister is responsible for the baby’s death.

The 8-year-old sister of the toddler, who was allegedly murdered, testified in court on Tuesday.

On Monday, the defense attorney implied that all of the bruises found on the toddler were caused by the 8-year-old.

The attorney said the two had a very violent relationship, and she was the one responsible for killing the baby.

However, 24-year-old Emily Defries is accused of killing her boyfriend’s 20-month-old daughter at their Norfolk home last year.

NewsChannel 3 reporter Gabriella DeLuca was in the courtroom when the 8-year-old girl testified as witness during her baby sister’s murder trial.

The girl had a Kleenex in one hand and a stuffed animal in the other.

Defense questioned her & asked if she didn't like when someone else played w her toys, if she remembered hitting baby sister

— Gabriella DeLuca (@GabriellaDeLuca) September 29, 2015

The little girl responded with “I don’t know” and “I don’t remember” several times during the trial.

The girl said she wanted to play with baby Anna, but Anna was sleeping.

The girl says the day Anna Belle died, she went up to smile at her sister.

The girls’ dad also testified and said he supported Defries–until recently

Back in May 2014, paramedics arrived to their Gregory Drive home and found the infant unresponsive. The baby girl was pronounced dead 30 minutes later at the hospital.

The former Sailor told detectives the 20-month-old was sleeping, while her son and the victim’s older sister were playing outside in the backyard.

When she came inside to check on the infant – Defries says she found the baby at the bottom of the stairs and that the baby must have fallen down.

Court records show the 20-month-old girl suffered a fractured skull and several bruises on her tiny body.

An autopsy says it was no accident.

The doctor went on to say Anna Belle had injuries all over her body, including under her chin, her stomach and back, and behind her ear. The fatal injury was a large fracture to her skull, according to the doctor.

Two doctors said a fall down the stairs didn’t kill the baby, given the extent of her injuries.

Anna Belle’s mother also testified and said she never saw bruises on her daughter until her ex started dating Defries.

Three of Defries’ aquaintances all said they never saw anything unusual happen when they saw her and baby Anna together.

https://www.wtkr.com/2015/09/28/norfolk-woman-accused-of-killing-baby-girl-pleads-not-guilty-to-murder-charges

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George Huguely Murders Yeardley Love

George Huguely is a killer from Virginia who was convicted of the murder of Yeardley Love

According to court documents George Huguely and Yeardley Love were involved in a relationship that was off and on due to Hughuely aggressive behavior. On the day of the murder Yeardley Love would be found dead inside of her apartment with obvious signs of trauma to her body

George Huguely would be arrested, made a full detailed confession, was convicted and sentenced to twenty three years in prison

George Hughuely Now

Personal Information George Wesley Huguely V Alias: 

George Wesley Huguely

Age/Race/Sex

36/White/Male

Location

Beaumont Correctional Center

Inmate I.D.#

1458946

Release Date

06/17/2030

George Huguely Videos

RICH KID Realizes He's Going To Prison For Life - True Crime Documentary

George Huguely Case

A former University of Virginia lacrosse player is liable for fatally beating his girlfriend in 2010 and must pay $15 million in damages in a wrongful death lawsuit, a jury found Monday.

George Huguely V is currently serving a 23-year prison sentence in the killing of Yeardley Love after being convicted of second-degree murder during a 2012 criminal trial. Huguely and Love both played lacrosse at UVA and had a two-year, on-again, off-again relationship before Yeardley was found beaten to death in her off-campus apartment on May 3, 2010.

The lawsuit sought to hold George Huguely civilly liable in Love’s death and asked the jury to award $29.5 million in compensatory damages, plus $1 million in punitive damages.

On Monday, the jury awarded $7.5 million in compensatory damages to both Yeardley’s mother, Sharon Love, and her sister, Lexi Love Hodges. Punitive damages were not awarded.

Both women broke down in tears when the jury’s verdict was read in Charlottesville Circuit Court Monday night after about two hours of deliberations. The verdict came almost 12 years to the day Yeardley Love was found dead in her off-campus apartment.

“This had been a tremendous ordeal,” said Paul Bekman, an attorney for the family.

“They’ve lived through this, they lived through the criminal trial, and now they had to go through this civil trial,” he said. “It is a partial closure that means a lot to them.”

Bekman said the jury was asked to answer the question of whether George Huguely acted with “willful and wanton” misconduct and whether his actions were in “conscious disregard” of Love’s rights. The jury answered “yes,” a finding that meant they could award punitive damages, but they did not.

But Bekman said the finding of willful and wanton misconduct means that Huguely will not be able to have the $15 million in compensatory damages dismissed by a bankruptcy court if he argues that he does not have the assets to pay the judgment.

During the trial, George Huguely’s lawyer, Matthew Green, acknowledged that Huguely’s actions caused Yeardley’s death and said her family was entitled to compensatory damages.

But Green said Huguely had been drinking heavily for more than 24 hours before he confronted Love in her apartment, did not intend to kill her and was unaware that she was dead until police told him while questioning him the next morning. Green argued that Huguely’s actions did not rise to the level of “willful and wanton” conduct needed for a jury to award punitive damages under Virginia law.

“We think the result of the jury in granting the defense request not to award punitive damages shows that George got a fair trial ten years ago and justice was done at that time and no additional punishment was warranted,” Green said after the verdict.

Love, of Cockeysville, Maryland, and Huguely, of Chevy Chase, Maryland, were both 22-year-old UVA seniors who were weeks away from graduation.

Love’s attorneys told jurors that Huguely and Love had a rocky relationship that was damaged by Huguely’s excessive drinking. They said Huguely kicked a hole in Love’s bedroom door, then beat her and left her alone in her apartment without seeking medical attention. A medical examiner concluded she died of blunt force trauma to her head.

Huguely testified that he doesn’t remember breaking into her room and leaving her fatally injured. He said he had been drinking heavily and compared his memory of the night Love was killed to a slideshow in which 98% of the slides had been removed.

Bekman said the jury’s verdict sends a message that being drunk does not excuse violent behavior. “You think you get a free pass — you don’t,” he said. “There’s accountability, and accountability took place today in Charlottesville.”

Toward the end of his testimony, Huguely turned to Love’s mother and sister and apologized for killing her.

“I miss her and think about her every day. I would do anything to take back that night,” he said. “I take responsibility for what happened to her and I should have never gone over to her apartment that night.”

Sharon Love initially filed a wrongful death lawsuit in 2012, but it was voluntarily dismissed years later after court rulings determined that Huguely was not entitled to coverage under a $6 million homeowners insurance policy held by his family.

A new lawsuit filed in 2018 dropped negligence claims, but added a claim alleging that an assault and battery by Huguely was the proximate cause of Love’s death.

https://www.espn.com/college-sports/story/_/id/33845927/jury-rules-ex-virginia-lacrosse-player-george-huguely-v-pay-15m-damages-killing-girlfriend-yeardley-love

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