New
Hampshire to make criminals face victims' families at sentencing
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[August 12, 2015]
By Ted Siefer
CONCORD, N.H. (Reuters) - New Hampshire
Governor Maggie Hassan on Tuesday signed a law that requires convicted
criminals to appear in court at sentencing when victims’ families and
friends are given the opportunity to express their pain.
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The law, believed to be the first of its kind in the United
States, was proposed after a man convicted last year of murdering a
19-year-old college student asked not to attend his sentencing,
saying he didn't want to hear the victim's family “yell and whine
and bitch and moan.”
In the end, convicted murderer Seth Mazzaglia, 33, dropped the
request and attended the sentencing, where family members of his
victim, Elizabeth "Lizzy" Marriott, expressed profound grief and
anger toward him.
Her father, Bob Marriott, was among several relatives of crime
victims who backed the bill.
At the bill-signing ceremony, Hassan praised Marriott “for speaking
up on behalf of his daughter Lizzy, for his family, and for all
families impacted by crime.”
She touted the bill as a bipartisan accomplishment at a time when
tensions are high between the Democratic governor and the
Republican-controlled legislature over a budget standoff.
The signing comes almost a year to the day after Mazzaglia was
sentenced to life in prison without parole for first degree murder
involving sexual assault, among other crimes.
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He was accused of having his girlfriend lure Marriott to their
apartment so he could have sex with her. Prosecutors alleged
Mazzaglia strangled Marriott after she rejected his sexual advances
and then raped her lifeless body.
(Editing by Barbara Goldberg and Eric Walsh)
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