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Lan Anh
LE
Same day
A Sacramento Superior Court judge this morning
sentenced a 22-year-old woman to 25-years-to-life for stabbing her
on-and-off-again lover to death - 91 times - in a fit of jealousy and
rage.
In August, a jury convicted Lan Anh Le of
first-degree murder in the March 2010 stabbing of Monica Anderson, 26.
Le was 20 at the time.
Judge Ernest W. Sawtelle handed down the maximum
sentence after addressing Anderson's tearful family in the audience,
telling them he couldn't help but think of his own daughter and what
it would be like to lose a child.
"My deepest sympathy is extended to you," Sawtelle
said, "and I feel a great sense of sorrow on your behalf."
Several of Anderson's relatives had addressed the
court, describing their sense of loss and devastation in the wake of
the woman's death.
Her mother, Vee Arroyo, described it as "a mother's
worst nightmare." She said the grief has endangered her marriage, her
health and her job.
"It has turned my life upside down," she said, her
voice shaking.
Le's public defender, Sandra Di Giulio, read a
brief statement from her client, apologizing for what she had done.
"I hope you can forgive me," Di Giulio read from
Le's statement. "I'm really remorseful for what I've done."
Attorneys on both sides described the women as
being romantically involved. However, Arroyo told The Bee that her
daughter always denied that.
After the hearing, Anderson's family and friends
hugged and cried in the hallway. Arroyo said she was pleased by the
sentence, but added: "I still don't have my daughter back.
Love story's sad ending goes to Sacramento jury
in murder trial
By Kim Minugh - The
Sacramento Bee
Wednesday, Aug. 1, 2012
They told a tumultuous and dramatic story of a love
affair between two young women, a tale replete with passion and
partying, jealousy and a horrible ending.
But it was how that tragic end played out that the two attorneys
disagreed on: Was it a cold, calculated murder? Or a spontaneous act
fueled by cocaine, liquor and rage?
On Tuesday morning, the prosecutor and the public defender left the
answer to jurors who will decide the fate of Lan Anh Le who, at the
age of 22, stands accused of murder in the death of her lover,
26-year-old Monica Anne Anderson.
A few key details of the March 13, 2010, attack were undisputed in
court. Le, then 20, and Anderson had spent the night drinking vodka
and snorting lines of cocaine before a volatile argument over a
cellphone charger broke out in the bedroom.
As Anderson tried to flee her Citrus Heights apartment, Le chased her
down, butcher knife in hand. She sank it into her lover's back and
then, when Anderson had collapsed on the ground, into her chest, arms
and neck.
A forensic pathologist would count 91 stab wounds.
Deputy District Attorney Anthony Ortiz promised a short,
straightforward trial with gruesome evidence, some of which he flashed
on a projector during his opening statement.
He said the evidence would leave no doubt in jurors' minds that
Anderson was "brutally murdered without any just reason at all."
As a preview, Ortiz played for the jury clips of the videotaped
statement Le gave to a Citrus Heights detective shortly after the
attack. In one clip, she claims "everything would have been peaceful"
if Anderson had just handed over the cellphone charger; in another,
she said Anderson "didn't really put up a fight."
"She started running away from me, and that's when it happened," she
said in yet another segment, referring to the stabbing. "I was just
really pissed."
Ortiz described for the jury a frantic call Anderson had made to her
mother six months earlier, in which the tearful young woman said her
girlfriend had blindly attacked her, blackening her eye and bruising
her arm.
He showed photos a Citrus Heights police officer had taken of her
injuries.
Other snapshots Ortiz displayed for the jury included post-mortem
pictures of Anderson's carved-up body, one of them eliciting an
audible gasp from a relative in the audience.
More evidence would show the "pettiness" and "ridiculousness" of the
crime, Ortiz said. "Ultimately you'll hear about several decisions
made that day – a decision to kill, a decision to chase her down, a
decision to stab her multiple times in the back," Ortiz said. "You're
going to be left with the feeling, 'This is ridiculous.' "
Public Defender Sandra Di Giulio sought to build sympathy for her
client, going back to Le's troubled childhood as one of 10 children
raised by Vietnamese refugees in a cramped south Sacramento home.
Child Protective Services came to investigate allegations of abuse and
endangerment on several occasions, Di Giulio said, but the children
had been taught not to talk to them.
She described a 16-year-old Le who hooked up with the wrong guy, one
responsible for getting her addicted to drugs. Finally, at a group
home for women, Le began to get her life in order, only to get aged
out of the system.
Di Giulio said Le fell hard for Anderson, "looked up to (her) … this
pretty, older girl who seemed to have everything."
She described their relationship as young love, "troubled" and
"passionate."
"She loved Monica Anderson so much, but on March 13, 2010, when Lan
was just 20 years old, she did something while under the influence of
alcohol and cocaine and emotion that she is never ever going to be
able to take back," Di Giulio said.
She described her client lying down next to Anderson's lifeless body
and turning the knife on herself, cutting herself as she had done as a
troubled teen, until a friend of Anderson's took the knife from her
hands and detained her until police arrived.
After reviewing the evidence, Di Giulio told jurors, "you're going to
understand why this was a crime of passion, a crime that can only
happen when a person like Le has such intense feelings for somebody
else."
"It wasn't this deliberate, thought-out, planned, premeditated …
murder," Di Giulio said.
Murder trial begins for woman accused of
stabbing lover 91 times in 2010
There was no question in Dept. 17 this morning of
who killed Monica Anderson.
Instead, attorneys in the Sacramento Superior
courtroom debated in their opening statements whether Lan Anh Le
stabbed her 26-year-old lover in a premeditated, calculated attack on
March 13, 2010 or in a fit of passion.
Deputy District Attorney Anthony Ortiz warned
jurors that they would see gruesome evidence during the trial, but
argued that the case is a "straightforward" murder case.
Le, now 22, stabbed her girlfriend 91 times, proof
of "the viciousness of the attack," Ortiz said.
"When you see the evidence, you'll come to no different conclusion -
this was a murder," Ortiz said.
Le's public defender, Sandra Di Giulio, argued
instead that her client acted that morning in the heat of passion,
fueled by vodka, cocaine, jealousy and rage.
"She did something while under the influence of
alcohol and cocaine and emotion that she is never ever going to be
able to take back," Di Giulio told the jury.
After reviewing the evidence, she said, "you're
going to understand why this was a crime of passion, a crime that can
only happen when a person like Lan has such intense feelings for
somebody else."
Twenty years old at the time, Le fatally stabbed
Anderson after a night of partying that ended with a fight between the
two women in the victim's Citrus Heights apartment. The women were
fighting over a cell phone charger.
Lan Anh Le Of Citrus Heights kills another woman
during brawl
News10.net
March 13, 2010
A violent struggle between two women ended in a
fatal stabbing at a Citrus Heights apartment complex early Saturday
morning, according to authorities.
The fight between the two adult women was reported
around 2:30 a.m. at the complex at 7683 Greenback Lane, Citrus Heights
Police Sgt. Lee Herrington said.
Herrington said the two women knew each other and
it was not immediately clear what sparked the altercation in the
complex common area.
Monica Anne Anderson, 26, suffered major injuries
and was pronounced dead at the scene. The other woman, 20-year-old Lan
Anh Le, was treated for minor injuries at a local hospital and
arrested on murder charges.