A jury in Connecticut gave the death sentence to a man convicted of the home invasion, torture, kidnapping and sexual assault of a woman and her two daughters. Steven Hayes was convicted on six charges which carry the possibility of a death penalty after the jury deliberated for 17 hours. Jennifer Hawke-Petit and her daughters Michaela and Hayley were killed during the course of the crimes committed by Hayes and a co-defendant.
Many in the courtroom cried as the jury announced their verdict, reported the Hartford Courant. The jury found for the death sentence on six gruesome counts, including killing a child under the age of 16, killing in the course of a kidnapping and killing in the course of a sexual assault.
Common mitigating factors offered during a penalty phase of a trial include drug addiction and an abusive childhood. Hayes’ attorneys brought up both factors to try to spare Hayes’ life. However, the Courant reports, Hayes’ brother offered evidence of how brutally Hayes treated him during childhood, which may have served to change the picture for the jury.
Prosecutor Gary Nicholson said the trial was very emotional, and said that the jury did an incredible job handling the case. “It’s very tough dealing with a case like this,” he told the Courant. “We’re very thankful for the jury verdict and we’re glad it’s over.”
Hayes’ co-defendant, Joshua Komisarjevsky, will go on trial next year, reports the Courant. He too faces a possible death sentence.
Related Resources:
- Conn. Home Invasion: “Shame, Depression” Cited as Mitigating Factors by Steven Hayes’ Defense (CBS/AP)
- Introduction to the Death Penalty (Death Penalty Information Center)
- Is the judge the only person who may decide the sentence? (FindLaw)
- Recent Death Penalty Statistics (FindLaw)
You Don’t Have To Solve This on Your Own – Get a Lawyer’s Help
Civil Rights
Block on Trump’s Asylum Ban Upheld by Supreme Court
Criminal
Judges Can Release Secret Grand Jury Records
Politicians Can’t Block Voters on Facebook, Court Rules