The murder of Yeardley Love took place in May 2010 in Charlottesville, Virginia. Love, a University of Virginia (UVA) women's lacrosse student-athlete, was found unresponsive in her Charlottesville apartment on May 3. Later that day, UVA men's lacrosse player George Wesley Huguely V, originally of Chevy Chase, Maryland, was arrested by Charlottesville Police. Huguely was tried and found guilty of Love's murder.
Video Murder of Yeardley Love
Background
Yeardley Love
Yeardley Reynolds Love was born on July 17, 1987, in Baltimore, Maryland, to John and Sharon Love. She resided in Cockeysville, Maryland. At Notre Dame Preparatory School, Love was a member of the varsity lacrosse and field hockey teams all four years and was an All-County lacrosse player in 2006. Love was admitted to the University of Virginia, where she majored in government and minored in Spanish. She was also a member of the sorority Kappa Alpha Theta. As a member of the UVA women's lacrosse team, the Cavaliers, Love scored her first goal in her first game, playing against Virginia Tech. Love started in nine of her 16 games in 2009 and in three of her 15 games in 2010.
George Huguely
George Wesley Huguely V was born on September 17, 1987, in Washington, D.C., to George Huguely IV and Marta Murphy, who subsequently divorced. Huguely attended the all-boys Landon School in Bethesda, Maryland, and resided in Chevy Chase, Maryland. At Landon, Huguely was an All-American lacrosse player and played football as well. During his senior year at Landon, Huguely was the quarterback of the football team.
In 2007, Huguely was charged with underage possession of alcohol in Florida, where his family owns a vacation home. In 2008, Huguely was arrested for public drunkenness and resisting arrest outside the Phi Kappa Sigma fraternity house at Washington and Lee University; police tased Huguely to subdue him. In that incident, Huguely received a suspended sentence of 60 days and six months of probation, was fined, and was ordered to perform community service and participate in a drug treatment program. He did not disclose this arrest to the University of Virginia, despite a requirement to do so. During the 2010 season, Huguely was a midfielder for the Virginia Cavaliers men's lacrosse team. He majored in anthropology at Virginia.
Maps Murder of Yeardley Love
Murder and arrest of a suspect
Around 2:15 a.m. (EDT) on May 3, 2010 police were called to Love's (off campus) apartment on 14th Street in the University Corner district in Charlottesville. At the scene, Love was found unresponsive and was pronounced dead. The 911 call from Love's roommate reported that Love suffered an alcohol overdose, but detectives noticed "obvious physical injuries to her body" upon arrival. The suspect, George Huguely, was living next door.
On May 4, Huguely was charged with murdering Love and was held in the Albemarle-Charlottesville Regional Jail. At a May 6 court appearance, Huguely's attorney, Fran Lawrence, stated: "Ms. Love's death was not intended but an accident with a tragic outcome." Huguely appeared at the hearing via video.
Huguely and Love dated over the course of two years, but had broken up. At the Charlottesville police station, Huguely waived his Miranda rights and narrated graphic details of his assaulting Love, stating that he kicked open Love's locked bedroom door and "shook Love, and her head repeatedly hit the wall". Evidence that police seized from Huguely's apartment included two Apple laptop computers, a spiral notebook, two white socks, bathroom and entryway rugs, and a Virginia lacrosse shirt with a red stain. Investigators also followed leads of domestic violence between Huguely and Love, including threatening e-mail and text messages that Huguely sent to Love post-breakup; a violent encounter between the couple that was broken up by several visiting lacrosse players from the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill; and an incident in which Huguely attacked Love while drunk but did not recall having hit her. An unnamed student told the New York Daily News that Huguely and Love broke up after the drunken Huguely assaulted Love.
Legal proceedings
A preliminary hearing for Huguely on a first degree murder charge was held April 11, 2011, in Charlottesville District Court. Huguely continued to be held without bond at the Charlottesville regional jail. On January 7, 2011, prosecutors added five additional charges: felony murder, robbery of a residence, burglary, entering a house with an intent to commit a felony, and grand larceny. A grand jury indicted him on April 18, 2011, on first degree and felony murder charges, and a trial date of February 6, 2012, was set. Closing arguments were made on February 18, but - because of the Monday Presidents' Day holiday - jury deliberations did not begin until February 22. After deliberating for about nine hours, the jury delivered a verdict of guilty of second degree murder and grand larceny. After a further two hours of deliberation, the jury recommended a 26-year sentence: 25 years for second degree murder and one year for grand larceny. The jury ruled out the "heat of passion" clause that characterizes voluntary manslaughter. A few of the jurors who spoke to the news media cited the importance of the videotape of Huguely's police interrogation, which was a central part of prosecutor Dave Chapman's case: the jury found that "pretty much every opportunity he had, he lied first. He was not telling the truth on several occasions."
Conviction and sentencing
On August 30, 2012, Huguely was formally sentenced to 23 years in prison by Judge Edward Hogshire, with sentences of 23 years for the second degree murder conviction and one year for the grand larceny conviction to run concurrently. He is scheduled to be released in late 2029.
Appeals process
The Court of Appeals of Virginia issued a ruling on April 23, 2013, which granted Huguely an appeal based on two key issues. The court agreed with the defense's argument that Huguely's right to counsel was violated when one of his attorneys, Rhonda Quagliana, fell ill and missed a day of trial. The court also granted the appeal based on the failure to exclude "Juror 32" because of possible doubts about his/her impartiality. The Court of Appeals then heard oral arguments from Huguely's new lawyer, Paul Clement (former Solicitor General of the United States), on December 11, 2013. Clement argued for a new trial, arguing Huguely was denied his right to an attorney when one of his (two) lawyers fell ill during the trial. Nine days into the trial, Huguely co-counsel Rhonda Quagliana became visibly ill with stomach flu, but the trial judge refused to grant a continuance, even though Huguely objected: co-counsel Frances Lawrence was asked by the trial judge whether he could proceed without Quagliana, he said he could. In addition to raising questions about "Juror 32", Huguely's appeal team also objected to the trial judge's refusal to allow "blame the victim" questions of jurors and said the jury was not properly instructed on the definition of "malice", an element in a second-degree murder conviction. The Court of Appeals ruled against Huguely on March 4, 2014, affirming the second-degree murder conviction. In November 2014 the Virginia Supreme Court declined to consider Huguely's appeal.
Huguely in prison
In late September 2012, Huguely was moved from the Albemarle Charlottesville Regional Jail to the Powhatan Reception and Classification Center. On October 15, he was assigned to Keen Mountain Correctional Center, a high-security state prison in the far southwestern corner of Virginia: Keen is a Level 4 facility in Virginia's 6-tier system of rating prison security. A Corrections Department spokesperson said Huguely must serve at least a year of his 23-year sentence with no major infractions before the state would consider allowing him to transfer to the Maryland prison system (where he could be closer to his parents' home in Bethesda, Maryland.) In early November 2013, Huguely was transferred from the Keen Mountain Correctional Center to River North Correctional Center in Independence, Virginia. The River North facility opened in October 2013 and is a Level 4 facility meant for long-term prisoners. As of December 2016 he is being held at the Augusta Correctional Center in Craigsville, VA.
Wrongful death civil lawsuits
On April 26, 2012, Sharon Love filed a wrongful death lawsuit against George Huguely V, asking for $29.45 million in compensatory damages and $1 million in punitive damages. On May 1, 2012, she filed a $29.45 million wrongful death lawsuit against UVA, men's lacrosse head coach Dom Starsia, associate head coach Marc Van Arsdale, and UVA director of athletics Craig Littlepage, alleging gross negligence on the part of the coaching staff. The suit alleged that "It was well known to the players and coaches on the UVA men's and women's lacrosse teams that Huguely's alcohol abuse and erratic, aggressive behavior was increasingly getting out of control, especially his obsession with Love and his aggressiveness and threats to Love" and that in spite of this, no action was taken "to discipline Huguely, to suspend or remove Huguely from the lacrosse team, to refer Huguely for treatment or counseling for alcohol/substance abuse or anger/aggressive behavior management, or to subsequently report Huguely's potential risk of violence pursuant to the UVA Policy on Preventing and Addressing Threats or Acts of Violence".
The Love family dropped its suit against the university and its coaches on July 23, 2013, with no reason given. However, the wrongful death suit against George Huguely was scheduled to go to trial September 29, 2014, but after multiple delays has been pushed back to a current trial date of July 30, 2018.
Aftermath
"My hope for Yeardley, and for you," said University of Virginia president John Casteen at a May 6, 2010 candlelight vigil, "is that her dying inspires an anger, a sense of outrage that engenders determination here and wherever Yeardley's name is recognized that no woman, no person in this place, this community, this state, our nation need either fear for her safety or experience violence for any reason." A funeral Mass for Love was held at the Cathedral of Mary Our Queen on May 8 with an attendance of around 2,000.
On May 10, UVA women's lacrosse coach Julie Myers explained why the team planned to go forward with its role in the NCAA tournament, "Let's do it the way that Yards would want us to do it."
In their respective tournaments, the men's team advanced to the semifinal where they lost to Duke, who would go on to win the championship, and the women's team advanced to the quarterfinal.
One Love Foundation established
Yeardley Love wore jersey number "1" while playing lacrosse for the University of Virginia and the team retired her number. Within months of her murder, her family established the "One Love Foundation" to raise awareness - through education and technology - about domestic violence, especially "relationship violence".
On September 29, 2010, the family of Yeardley Love announced the creation of the Yeardley Reynolds Love Foundation, Inc., also known as the One Love Foundation, to honor her memory. "The mission of the foundation is to encourage and develop in children and young adults four qualities of character that Yeardley exemplified ... service, kindness, humility and sportsmanship ... that together add up to One Love," explained Sharon Love, Yeardley's mother. "The foundation would like to 'bring out the Yeardley' in everyone by igniting the spirit of One Love in children and young adults, encouraging them to choose a path of goodness."
In fall 2012, the foundation launched the "Be 1 for Change", a long-term initiative with the goal of combating relationship violence throughout the United States. One Love has plans to build a bronze statue of Yeardley at Meadow Wood Park in Baltimore, Md. to serve as an inspiration to young athletes. In September 2013, the foundation created an app that allows users to fill out a questionnaire about their relationship, and then ranks the danger of it turning violent. The app is free to download, and it does not leave a record on the mobile device - meaning that it can't be traced by the user's partner.
See also
- Clery Act
References
Further reading
- Wertheim, L. Jon (May 17, 2010). "Why Did Yeardley Love Have to Die?". Sports Illustrated. 112 (21): 28-34.
- Three years after her daughter's murder, Sharon Love steadfast in her faith Catholic Review May 3, 2013
External links
- Inside Lacrosse article which includes repository of stories and other links related to the case
- Washington Post article
- Hook articles
- Cavalier Daily article
- Sports Illustrated article
- Inspirational Love Website
- One Love Foundation website
Source of the article : Wikipedia