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[Deathpenalty]death penalty news --- VIRG.

Joerg Sommer
Tue Aug 16 12:14:06 2005

death penalty news

June 11, 2004


VIRGINIA:

Virginia's only woman on death row says sentence unfair

The only woman on Virginia's death row doesn't deny that she deserves 
punishment for having her husband and stepson killed so she could collect 
insurance money.

But paying the ultimate penalty, says Teresa Lewis, is too much -- 
especially considering the men who actually did the deed will live out 
their lives behind bars.

"I don't think it's fair for the triggermen to get life, and I got the 
death penalty," she said, speaking by phone through a glass partition at 
the Fluvanna Correctional Center for Women.

Lewis pleaded guilty last year to arranging the slayings of her husband and 
stepson to collect a $250,000 insurance policy.

At her sentencing, Circuit Judge Charles Strauss said Lewis had no motive 
but greed in the October 30, 2002, slayings and was even more culpable than 
the two young men she hired to kill 51-year-old Julian Lewis and his 
25-year-old son, C.J. Lewis.

Lewis maintains she hired the hitmen to escape an abusive relationship.

Strauss said he was particularly bothered by the slaying of C.J., who was 
home on leave from Army National Guard duty and "by all accounts was a fine 
young man," said defense attorney Thomas Blaylock.

Teresa Lewis kissed him goodnight in the family's Pittsylvania County home, 
knowing the hit men were coming, Blaylock said.

Prosecutor David Grimes said he sought the death penalty because "her 
actions in planning and getting the other two to actually do the shooting 
was extraordinarily cold."

Blaylock said he was surprised by Teresa Lewis' sentence because she was 
the first to confess and led police to the triggermen.

Teresa Lewis said she's confident she can avoid execution, and smiled and 
laughed through much of a recent hourlong interview with The Associated Press.

"I just feel like I have something to live for. I've got a daughter here," 
she said.

Christie Lynn Bean, 17, is serving five years at the Fluvanna prison 
because she knew about the murder plot but remained silent. A jury 
convicted Bean of conspiring with her mother and of two counts of 
first-degree murder as an accessory before the fact.

"I feel terrible for her being here," Teresa Lewis said. "She knew about it 
before it happened. Oh, what a mess! I didn't think about the consequences 
it would bring. I hate myself."

Teresa Lewis said she met would-be triggermen Matthew Shallenberger and 
Rodney Fuller, both in their 20s, while waiting in the customer service 
line at a Wal-Mart store. She and Shallenberger became lovers and concocted 
the scheme to murder Julian Lewis, who she said was an abusive alcoholic.

"My motive was to get rid of Julian because I was a prisoner in my own 
home," she said. "I didn't care about the money."

Teresa Lewis hopes she can win a new trial, or at least a reduced sentence. 
The Virginia Supreme Court rejected her appeal in March. Blaylock said the 
case will be appealed to the federal courts.

Kathy Clifton said she wants to see Lewis executed for arranging the 
murders of her father and brother.

If Lewis is put to death, "I will be there," Clifton said. "I want to see 
it finished.

"I want justice for my father and brother."

Teresa Lewis would be the first woman executed in Virginia since 1912, when 
17-year-old Virginia Christian died in the electric chair for suffocating 
her female employer with a towel.

Virginia has executed 91 people since the Supreme Court reinstated the 
death penalty in 1976, second behind Texas. Of the 912 people executed 
nationally since then, 10 have been women.

(source: AP)