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On the recording played in court, Viens was asked what happened on Oct. 18, 2009, the night his wife disappeared. He said he had noticed money missing from his restaurant and suspected his wife. They got into an argument, he said, and he forced her onto the floor, where he wrapped her up and put a piece of duct tape over her mouth before going to bed. He awoke to find her dead, and he panicked, he said. Viens was charged with first-degree murder, which means the killing was premeditated, but jurors had the option of convicting him of that or second-degree murder or manslaughter. The six men and six women on the panel deliberated for about five hours before reaching the verdict. Erickson said the jury did not believe the killing was premeditated, even though Viens had threatened to kill his wife after finding the money missing. "Anyone can say that and not follow through," the juror said. Viens' lawyer, Fred McCurry, declined comment on the way out of the courtroom except to say he planned to appeal. Viens is scheduled to be sentenced Nov. 27. He could face 15 years to life in prison. Dawn Viens' sister, Dayna Papin, said, "There's no happy ending. Two families have suffered tremendously. This is a man I've known for 20 years who was like a father to me." Patterson, the longtime friend, said she would like to visit Viens in prison. "Even through all this, he is still my friend," she said. "I struggle with the lovely person who killed another lovely person. I would remind him of how much Dawn loved him." She said she was satisfied with the second-degree murder verdict. "Murder is murder," she said.
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