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Katherine Marie SEEBER
Victim profile: Ruth Witter, her 91-year-old
step-great-grandmother
Katherine Seeber, convicted of killing
step-great-grandmother in Saratoga County, stabbed to death in NYC
By Lucian McCarty - Saratogian.com
June 6, 2013
The last chapter in a tragic saga spanning more
than a decade of Saratoga County history ended the way it started
-- with a senseless murder.
Katherine Seeber, 32, was stabbed to death Tuesday at her home in
Queens. An ex-boyfriend has been charged with second-degree murder
-- the same charge Seeber, a former Wilton resident, pleaded
guilty to in the 2000 murder of her step-great-grandmother.
It has only been 11 months since Seeber was released from prison
after serving 12 years in the murder of Ruth Witter during a
botched robbery attempt.
Seeber's murder, police said, occurred about 5:30 p.m. in her 55th
Street home in Woodside, a suburban Queens neighborhood in what
police called a domestic incident. Police dispatchers had received
several 911 calls reporting the violent assault. The defendant is
Pedro Sanchez, 38, who has a lengthy criminal history and has been
to prison at least four times for various felonies.
"It's such a tragic end," said John Ciulla Jr., the now-retired
public defender who handled Seeber's case in Saratoga County. "I
am deeply saddened to hear it was in a domestic violence setting."
Ciulla said his relationship with Seeber lasted longer than any
relationship he ever had with a client, from the time she pleaded
guilty in 2001 to a decade later when they reunited to
successfully vacate the plea.
Seeber had pleaded guilty as part of a deal with prosecutors to
testify against her alleged co-conspirator, Jeffrey Hampshire, who
she said committed the murder.
She testified that Hampshire strangled Witter with an extension
cord during a burglary-gone-wrong and she contended they then both
duct-taped Witter's hands, legs and face and dumped her body in
Stillwater.
She was sentenced to 20 years in prison.
Hampshire, however, was acquitted and walked free.
Since then, however, he has served three separate prison sentences
for burglary, attempted burglary and tampering with evidence from
a fatal hit-and-run. He is still in prison.
According to Ciulla and other attorneys who worked on her appeal,
Seeber pleaded guilty based on forensic evidence that prosecutors
said indisputably put her at the scene of the crime.
Years later, the forensic lab technician who worked on the case
was exposed for having forged tests in more than 100 cases. He
committed suicide amid the investigation.
Seeber's attorneys successfully argued that her plea should be
tossed and she should be given a new trial. A year later, in May
2012, Seeber pleaded guilty to the lesser charge of manslaughter
and burglary in an Alford Plea, which allowed her to plead guilty
but maintain her innocence, admitting prosecutors could likely
prove the case.
She was sentenced to 14-1/2 years but, already having served 12,
she was free by July 2012.
Ciulla said he was planning to see her around the one-year
anniversary of her release.
Rehabilitation
The public defender said Seeber was the model of someone
rehabilitated by prison.
During sentencing last May, crying and hands shaking, Seeber told
the court and Witter's family she had been the victim of domestic
violence at the hands of Hampshire, whom she said "had a hold of
my life."
But she said her time in prison had been spent learning about and
teaching classes on how to break the cycle of domestic violence.
Ciulla said he watched Seeber mature from the 18-year-old who
pleaded guilty in 2000 to the 31-year-old woman released from
prison in 2012. Hearing of her death in an alleged case of
domestic violence "reinforces the hold that domestic violence has
in the lives of some people," he said.
Attorney Ben Ostrer, who worked on Seeber's appeal pro-bono in
conjunction with Ciulla, had frequently been in contact with her
since her release.
"This is someone who was really doing all she could to improve her
lot in life. When you spoke to her she was always upbeat and full
of optimism," Ostrer said. "This is an unspeakable tragedy; to
think about the life she led from where she was to now."
During her sentencing, Seeber talked about the classes she had
taken in prison and her involvement in the Church of Jesus Christ
and Latter Day Saints.
Seeber got a job as an office manager four months ago. Before that
she was a nanny. She had trouble finding work because her
conviction was technically only last year, but Osterer said, "she
overcame that.
"It's just a horror."
Sanchez' case is pending in Queens County Criminal Court.
He was on parole at the time of his arrest for first-degree
criminal contempt, a felony. Now he faces charges of second-degree
murder, third-degree criminal possession of a weapon, and
tampering with evidence -- all felonies -- as well as resisting
arrest, a misdemeanor. In addition, he faces charges of robbery in
an unrelated case. He remains in custody.
After 12 years, a free woman: Katherine
Seeber released after serving time in death of
step-great-grandmother
By Lucian McCarty - Saratogian.com
July 17, 2012
BEDFORD HILLS -- After more than 12 years behind bars, Katherine
Seeber was released from prison Monday.
She has been incarcerated since 2001 when she pleaded guilty to
her role in the murder of Ruth Witter, her step-great-grandmother.
In 2001, when she was 18, Seeber was sentenced to 20 years to life
in prison for her second-degree murder conviction. At the time,
she testified against her co-defendant and ex-boyfriend, Jeffrey
Hampshire. Seeber said Hampshire strangled Witter with an
electrical cord and Seeber assisted him.
Hampshire was later acquitted of the crime.
Now 30, Seeber has been released from prison after a convoluted
court case in which she was allowed to take back her decade-old
guilty plea and was granted a trial to answer the charges --
forensic evidence presented against her in 2000 was discovered to
have been forged. In the lead-up to the new trial, she pleaded
guilty to a reduced charge.
Seeber was sentenced in May to 14-1/2 years in prison, but was
released after serving a little more than 12 years.
Seeber could not be reached for comment, but John Ciulla, the
Saratoga County public defender who represented her when she
pleaded guilty in 2001, said he spoke to Seeber last week. He said
she was nervous about her release.
"She has been in jail or prison for most of her adult life," he
said. "She was just a kid when she went in."
At her re-sentencing on May 29, Ciulla said he "shed some tears"
and that he was as close to Seeber as he has been to anyone he has
represented.
He said Seeber has been a model inmate, taking advantage of
educational programs, participating in extracurricular activities
and becoming heavily involved in the Catholic Church in Bedford
Hills Correctional Facility, despite being a member of the Church
of Latter Day Saints.
Ciulla said Seeber has also been involved with domestic violence
programs in prison -- something she tearfully admitted she was a
victim of during her sentencing earlier this year.
"She was trying to figure out why she found herself in the
situation at her great-grandmother's house she found herself in
and why she reacted to the situation as she did," Ciulla said.
Despite Seeber's trepidation about life outside prison, Ciulla
said he is optimistic about her future.
"You can never be 100 percent certain, but I believe she is
equipped with the tools necessary for her to live a law-abiding
life and become a productive member of society," he said.
Seeber's father died during her original trial and her mother died
this spring while she waited for an appeal. At her sentencing, she
said she intends to move to Washington to be with her brother. In
order for that to happen, though, she will need to get permission
from New York and Washington to serve her 2-1/2 years of
post-release supervision there.
Katherine Seeber sentenced to 14-1/2 years
in prison for step-great-grandmother's murder
Saratogian.com
May 29, 2012
BALLSTON SPA -- Katherine Seeber sobbed Tuesday as she apologized
to the family of Ruth Witter, her 91-year-old
step-great-grandmother, whom she helped to kill in 2000. The
30-year-old was sentenced to 14-1/2 years for the crime; 11 of
which she has already served.
But she is eligible for release in seven weeks -- on July 18 --
based on time served, her conduct in state prison and the new
sentence, according to a spokesperson for the Department of
Corrections and Community Services.
"I am very sorry for your loss and the pain and suffering I've
caused you," Seeber said, struggling to make it through the
statement she had prepared for her sentencing. "I'm sorry for all
of my actions and inactions."
Seeber pleaded guilty May 1 to first-degree manslaughter and
third-degree burglary, both felonies related to Witter's death.
Seeber pleaded guilty under a legal procedure known as an "Alford"
plea, in which she pleaded guilty without actually admitting her
culpability in the crime. She has always maintained that her
then-boyfriend, Jeffrey Hampshire, actually murdered Witter while
the two were burglarizing her home. Seeber admitted, though, to
helping Hampshire dump Witter's body in a snow bank in Stillwater.
In 2001, a jury acquitted Hampshire, though Seeber testified
against him.
District Attorney James A. Murphy III said he decided to allow the
Alford plea because Seeber's version of the crime -- that
Hampshire strangled Witter with an electrical cord -- could not be
effectively explored at trial because a jury found Hampshire
innocent of the charge in a 2001 trial.
"Because of the acquittal in that case, we couldn't talk about
accomplice liability or a co-conspirator," Murphy said.
Murphy's office had asked for a 17-year sentence but was satisfied
with the sentence Seeber received.
Seeber's hands shook while holding the statement she read in court
Tuesday. She said she was the victim of domestic abuse in her
relationship with Hampshire, a cycle of domestic violence that she
said "had a hold of my life."
She said that in prison she has found religion, participated in
domestic violence programs and attended college classes, things
that have "taken me from the broken-down woman I was 12 years ago
to the woman who stands here today."
Members of Witter's family were in court Monday but did not speak.
Instead, Assistant District Attorney Jennifer Buckley read a
statement they had prepared.
The victim's family said the "most troubling" aspect of the plea
was that "the defendant has never apologized for her actions or
for the death of Ruth Witter." Buckley said, "They have never
heard her say 'I'm sorry.' " Moments later, when Seeber uttered
those words, Witter's granddaughter's hand went to her mouth and
tears formed in her eyes. Witter's family declined to comment.
"I think the family has been waiting a long time for an apology,
and I think today their analysis is that the apology was sincere,"
Murphy said outside the courtroom. "That is something they took to
heart. I think they are processing that because it has taken such
a long time to come."
Long road to a trial
Seeber's case reads like a John Grisham novel.
In exchange for five years off a 25-years-to-life sentence, Seeber
pleaded guilty in 2001 to second-degree murder for her role in
Witter's 2000 death. She then testified against Hampshire.
Seeber's decision to plead guilty was based, in part, on forensic
evidence produced by Gary Veeder, a fiber analyst from the New
York State Police Forensic Lab. He testified in Hampshire's trial
that fibers found on duct tape around Witter's mouth and hands
were "identical" to fibers from gloves worn by Seeber and
Hampshire.
Veeder later admitted to forging lab tests during that analysis
and committed suicide during the investigation into his conduct.
Because the forged evidence played a prominent part in Seeber's
2001 guilty plea, when the evidence was discredited Saratoga
County Judge Jerry Scarano decided to vacate the plea and grant
her a trial for the crime, 12 years after it was committed.
In the lead-up to the trial, though, Seeber pleaded guilty -- via
the Alford plea -- to the lesser charge of manslaughter.
Hampshire went free after his acquittal on the murder charge, but
not for long. He was sent to prison later that year on an
unrelated burglary charge and served five years. Less than a year
after he was released, he was imprisoned again for attempted
burglary.
Hampshire is currently serving a two- to four-year prison sentence
-- his third -- for tampering with evidence in a fatal Saratoga
Springs hit-and-run in 2010. He was eligible for parole earlier
this month, but it was not granted.
The next time he could be freed is January 2014.
Freedom for Seeber
Inmates in New York are eligible for parole after serving
six-sevenths of their sentence; the time Seeber has already served
represents the majority of the 14-1/2 year sentence.
John Ciulla, the county's public defender who represented Seeber
originally and since then, said Seeber pleaded guilty again
because it allowed her to take a sentence of nearly time-served.
"She is probably a case study for what can happen with
rehabilitation," Ciulla said, pointing out she has taken advantage
of education programs offered in prison.
In her statement during sentencing, Seeber said she has become
heavily involved in the Church of Jesus Christ and Latter Day
Saints and has participated in domestic violence programs to help
fellow inmates.
The public defender said he is closer with Seeber than anyone else
he has worked with.
"I had a few tears as well," Ciulla said about the tearful
statement Seeber made during sentencing. "I think she will go on
to be a wonderful, productive member of society."
Seeber plans to move to Washington, where her brother lives, when
she gets out of prison.
As a prisoner in the state Department of Corrections and Community
Services, Seeber accumulated a few citations for misconduct, but
Corrections spokes-man Peter Cutler said they were "minor
infractions," such as disobeying an order and smoking.
Murphy said Seeber has also been cited while incarcerated at
Saratoga County Jail. According to jail representatives, those
records are not public.
Corrections officials will take those citations into account when
evaluating Seeber's release in July.
Katherine Seeber pleads guilty to
manslaughter in '00 death of elderly relative
By Emily Donohue - Saratogian.com
May 1, 2012
BALLSTON SPA -- Katherine Seeber pleaded guilty to first-degree
manslaughter Tuesday for the 2000 death of her
step-great-grandmother Ruth Witter.
Seeber's plea was unanticipated; she was expected to stand trial
for murder this summer.
In 2001, Seeber pleaded guilty to murder -- prior to standing
trial -- and was sentenced to 20 years to life in prison. Her
alleged co-conspirator, Jeffrey Hampshire, was acquitted of
charges he participated in the murder. Seeber has been serving her
prison sentence at Bedford Hills Correctional Facility since her
2001 guilty plea.
But years after her plea, some of the most damning evidence
against Seeber was called into question when state forensic expert
Gary Veeder admitting to falsifying some required tests and
committed suicide amid an investigation into his work.
After those events, Seeber's attorneys appealed to a Saratoga
County Judge Jerry Scarano to vacate Seeber's guilty plea. They
were successful and the plea was tossed in June 2011. That
decision was recently upheld by the state's highest court, setting
the stage for Seeber to stand trial for a crime she allegedly
committed more than a decade ago.
Tuesday's plea came during a scheduled conference between Seeber
and her attorneys and District Attorney James A. Murphy III after
Scarano had scheduled the murder trial for July 30.
"She's litigated for 12 years, she certainly didn't want to be
litigating for five more years," said Ben Ostrer, one of the
attorney's representing Seeber on a pro-bono basis in conjunction
with Saratoga County Public Defender John Ciulla.
Ciulla said Seeber decided to enter her plea rather than face "the
uncertainty of the trial."
Seeber entered what's known as an Alford plea which means she
pleads guilty, acknowledging the overwhelming evidence against
her, but maintains her innocence. Murphy said the Alford plea also
minimizes possibility of further appeals in this case, which has
wound its way from county court to the state's highest court twice
over the past 12 years.
The victim in this case, Ruth Witter -- Seeber's
step-great-grandmother -- was strangled in her home on Feb. 12,
2000. Her body was dumped at Saratoga National Historical Park in
Stillwater.
Seeber maintains that she was at Witter's house on the night of
her death, but was not there when the murder occurred. Seeber
maintains that Hampshire killed Witter; she testified against him
in the 2001 trial in which he was acquitted.
"We believe that jury, the Hampshire jury, did not believe (Seeber)
because of the false evidence presented by Gary Veeder," Ciulla
said.
Murphy said he was pleased Seeber opted to plead, "we were hopnig
to not have to retry the case after having tried the case once and
appealed twice," he said Tuesday.
"(Seeber's) decision is an indicator of what she did and that she
is taking responsibility for her conduct," Murphy added.
He added that the family of Ruth Witter -- who Seeber was related
to through her now-deceased father -- is also pleased with the
plea and the end of the lengthy court case.
Ciulla said Seeber is "extremely grateful that justice has finally
been done in her case."
As a part of the plea agreement, Seeber's prison sentence is
capped at 17 years.
Ciulla explained that Seeber will serve 6/7 of the prison sentence
-- which will be set by Scarano on May 29 -- and then be released
from prison and placed on post-release supervision, which is
similar to parole, for up to five years. If she does not get in
trouble while serving her post-release supervision term, she will
never have to serve the remaining 1/7 of the prison sentence.
Ostrer and Ciulla both said the fact that Seeber will have a
definitive release date -- she had been facing a sentence up to
life in prison -- was a major factor in her decision to plead.
"When sentencing takes place, she'll have a fixed release date and
she's still a young enough woman. She's been very productive while
incarcerated, she's done many things to improve herself," Ostrer
said.
She did not want to face the uncertainty of trial, he added. "As
the trial of Jeffrey Hampshire proves, all the confidence in the
world does not guarantee a result and I think this brings closure
to this matter in a way that will provide Katherine with hopefully
a very optimistic future."
Katherine Seeber to be tried for murder in
step-great-grandmother's death, 10 years after pleading guilty to
the crime
Saratogian.com
April 26, 2012
BALLSTON SPA -- After serving more than 10 years in prison for
second-degree murder, Katherine Seeber will be tried for the death
of her step-great-grandmother Ruth Witter.
Witter was strangled with an electrical cord, and her body was
dumped in Stillwater in 2000.
Seeber pleaded guilty in 2001 to the murder. She then testified
against her co-defendant, Jeffrey Hampshire, Seeber's
then-boyfriend, who was accused of putting the electrical cord
around Witter's neck during a botched-robbery.
He was acquitted of the crime. She was sentenced to 20 years to
life.
Her plea, though, was tossed last year by Saratoga County Court
Judge Jerry Scarano.
Seeber's attorneys claim that the tipping point in her decision to
plead guilty was the testimony of a state forensic analyst, Garry
Veeder, who said fibers found on duct tape removed from Witter's
mouth were "identical" to fibers found on gloves she and Hampshire
allegedly wore during the crime.
Later, though, Veeder admitted to having forged test results on a
number of cases he handled. He committed suicide in 2008 during
the investigation into his transgressions.
Based on that new evidence, Scarano vacated Seeber's guilty plea
last year, setting the stage for Seeber to stand trial for the
crime.
The Saratoga County District Attorney's office appealed that
decision.
Thursday, the Third Appellate Division New York State Supreme
Court upheld Scarano's decision.
Ben Ostrer from Ostrer and Hoovler in Chester New York and Vernon
S. Broderick from the New York City law firm of Weil, Gotshal and
Manges are representing Seeber on a pro-bono basis in conjunction
with the Saratoga County Office of the Public Defender, which
handled Seeber's initial case.
"We are all extremely pleased with the decision," Ostrer said
Thursday.
"We at all times thought Judge Scarano had rendered a
well-thought-through decision," Ostrer said. "There is some
renewed optimism on our part."
Ostrer said Seeber, who is currently being held in the Saratoga
County jail awaiting trial, may not know about her impending trial
as of late morning Thursday, because the decision is so fresh.
Seeber has been in Saratoga County jail since June when her plea
was vacated.
The case has been on hold since early March. The case was
scheduled to begin March 19, but with the appeal pending, it was
postponed until that decision came in.
Ostrer said he expects the case to resume in short order.
Saratoga County District Attorney James A. Murphy III said he
could not comment on the case specifically, other than to say "we
are prepared to proceed with a trial and will be ready when the
court sets a trial date. Despite the fact that she opted not to
have a trial initially does not mean she should not be entitled to
one now."
He said his office is "satisfied with the Appellate Division's
decision and are quite pleased" because the decision explicitly
stated that the prosecutor from Murphy's office committed no
wrongdoing. The decision places all the fault at Veeder's feet.
Murphy's office appealed Scarano's decision to vacate Seeber's
plea on the basis that there was no wrongdoing on the part of the
prosecutor, former Assistant District Attorney Richard Wendling.
He said Wendling, who no longer works with his office, is "an
outstanding professional."
In oral arguments before the appeals court, Broderick said Veeder
was acting on behalf of the prosecution when he faked the results
of his tests and argued that amounted to a "Brady violation." A
Brady violation is a legal term for when prosecutors suppress
evidence from the defense in a case.
In its decision, the appeals court emphasized that there was no
indication the prosecutor or state police were aware that Veeder
"cut certain procedural corners" when they used his testimony
against Seeber.
Wendling, in fact, informed the defense of Veeder's corner-cutting
when he learned about it in 2008, Murphy said.
Seeber gets 20-to-life
By Christa A. Parrish - Saratogian.com
April 4, 2001
BALLSTON SPA -- Katherine Seeber was sentenced to a minimum term
of 20 years and a maximum of life in state prison Tuesday for her
part in the murder of 91-year-old Ruth Witter, her stepgreat-grandmother.
Saratoga County Judge Jerry Scarano denied Seeber's motion to
change her guilty plea to not guilty. He also ignored public
defender John Ciulla's request to lighten the front end of
Seeber's sentence to 18 years.
Seeber, 19, pleaded guilty to second-degree murder Jan. 19, and
was a witness for the prosecution during the murder trial of
Jeffrey Hampshire.
Hampshire, 20, was also charged with three counts of second-degree
murder in Witter's February 2000 death. He was acquitted March 15,
after seven days of testimony and approximately 16 hours of jury
deliberation.
Seeber was also sentenced to two to six years for burglary in the
third degree, to be served concurrently with the murder sentence.
Assistant District Attorney Richard Wendling said that, at the
time of her plea, Seeber reserved her right to file a waiver of
appeal on the murder charge. She has 30 days to do so, and
Wendling expects his office will receive a notice of appeal --
most likely on concerns regarding the suppression hearings and
evidence that Scarano ruled could be used at trial.
A representative from the county Public Defender's Office said
Ciulla was not making further comments on the Seeberú:?e.
On Friday, the courtroom was full with members of Witter's family
and law enforcement officers involved in the investigation.
"Mr. Wendling, is there anyone who would like to be heard on
behalf of the victim?" Scarano asked.
There was no one.
Outside the courtroom, Sharyl Seeber -- Witter's granddaughter and
Katherine Seeber's stepmother -- said that justice was served, but
nothing can bring back Witter.
She added that she has no sympathy for Katherine Seeber because
she's going to prison for Witter's death and Hampshire will not.
"He was acquitted on the murder. That one's over and done. He'll
get what he gets for the burglary," she added. "It won't be 20
years, but it will be something."
Hampshire is in the county jail on a third-degree burglary charge
unrelated to the Witter strangulation. His bail request was denied
by Scarano on Friday.
Wendling said that the defense has until Monday to request any
pre-trial suppression hearings related to the burglary case.
The D.A.'s office, he said, is ready to proceed. Hampshire's trial
has been tentatively scheduled for early June.
Both the prosecution and Katherine Seeber also passed on the
opportunity to make a statement to the court Friday afternoon.
"That will conclude the matter," Scarano said. "The defendant is
remanded.
Great-granddaughter pleads guilty
By Jim Kinney - Saratogian.com
January 20, 2001
BALLSTON SPA -- A 19-year-old Wilton woman admitted Friday her
involvement in the strangling death of her 91-year-old stepgreat-grandmother.
Katherine Marie Seeber of Lot 89, Wilton Mobile Park on Louden
Road in Wilton, pleaded guilty Friday to second-degree murder in
the Feb. 12 death of Ruth Witter of Colonie.
She also pleaded guilty to third-degree burglary in an unrelated
Wilton case, according to the Saratoga County District Attorney's
Office.
Assistant District Attorney Richard Wendling said the plea
agreement reached Friday gives him the right to call Seeber as a
witness against her then-boyfriend, co-defendant Jeffrey T.
Hampshire.
Hampshire, 20, of Regatta View in Saratoga Springs, was also
charged with second-degree murder in the case. He has a Feb. 28
trial date, the same day Seeber's trial was to have started.
Wendling isn't sure he'll call Seeber at Hampshire's murder trial.
"There are a number of factors, and one is our confidence in our
case at this point," Wendling said. "But I think it's a good idea
to leave the door open."
At her plea, Seeber told the county she and Hampshire went
together to Ruth M. Witter's home last Feb. 12. They went outside,
decided that Hampshire would take items from the home while Seeber
stood between them, blocking Witter's view. But at that point,
Seeber broke off the narrative and did not say if she or Hampshire
actually strangled Witter. Police took an electrical cord into
evidence.
In the past, Seeber has said Hampshire did the job but he told
police that she did it.
Seeber also admitted transporting Witter's body into Saratoga
County and dumping it in Saratoga National Historical Park in
Stillwater.
Seeber's comments to a friend -- who in turn told Mechanicville
Police -- led police to Witter's body six days later. That same
day, state and Colonie police arrested Hampshire and Seeber.
Police said the pair fenced the stolen jewelry and other items and
used the money to party in hotel rooms over the Valentine's Day
weekend.
Neither of Hampshire's defense attorneys, Jeffrey Bagnoli and W.
Donald Carola, could be reached Friday night.
Both Bagnoli and Carola, and County Public Defender John Ciulla,
who is representing Seeber, tried unsuccessfully to get evidence
excluded. But County Judge Jerry Scarano ruled that Wendling can
use Seeber's and Hampshire's statements to each other and items
taken from their vehicles at trial.
Hampshire has told police Seeber killed Witter, but that he was
present.
Wendling said the plea agreement was reached suddenly, although
after talks with the defense and Scarano. He said he barely had
time to talk with Witter's family about the plea.
"I think one of the reasons to do the plea agreement was because
it gives them some closure," Wendling said. "This way there will
be one trial instead of two."
Wendling said he will meet with Hampshire's lawyers and Scarano
Monday afternoon to discuss Hampshire's trial. Hampshire also
faces charges in the same Wilton burglary case in which Seeber
pleaded guilty Friday.