Long road ahead for Conn. home invasion survivor(AP) 

NEW HAVEN, Conn. – how does a man move on with his life after losing his wife and daughters to two ruthless home invaders who tormented, then killed them?

For more than four years, a nation both disgusted and captivated by a chilling crime in prototypical suburbia has wondered that. Only one man — Dr. William Petit, the sole survivor — can provide the answer.

On Friday, with the second killer sentenced to death and the book closed after two long, graphic trials, Petit gave a clue as to how he copes with pain he has been forced to revisit continually in court.

“My only hope is for justice to be served and to do my best to honor the lives of my family, who should all still be here to share their gifts and love with the world,” Petit said Friday right before a judge sentenced Joshua Komisarjevsky, 31, to death.

Conn. home invasion killer is sentenced to death

“I hope to continue to honor my family,” said Petit, who survived being beaten with a baseball bat and tied up. “I push forward in the hope that good will overcome evil, and feel the need to tell the world that evil lives among us and we need to rid the world of it.”

The gruesome crime evoked comparisons to Truman Capote’s “In cold Blood,” about the brutal murders of a Kansas farmer and his family.

Komisarjevsky admitted in an audiotaped confession played for the jury in his trial late last year that he spotted Petit’s wife, Jennifer Hawke-Petit, and their 11-year-old daughter, Michaela, at a supermarket and followed them to their house in Cheshire, a suburb of New Haven.

After going home and putting his own daughter to bed, he and Steven Hayes, now 48, returned to the Petit house in the middle of the night, while the family was sleeping, to rob it.

Dr. Petit was beaten, tied up and taken to the basement. Michaela and Hayley, 17, were tied to their beds. in the morning, Hayes took Jennifer to the bank to withdraw money, while Komisarjevsky stayed at the house.

It’s believed that’s when he sexually assaulted Michaela, the 11-year-old. Hayes was convicted of sexually assaulting the mother.

After Hayes arrived back at the house with the girls’ mother, she was strangled. The pair doused the house and beds with gasoline, set it ablaze and left. The sisters, bound helplessly while flames and fumes rose around them, died of smoke inhalation.

Dr. Petit managed to escape the basement and hop, roll and crawl across a yard to a neighbor’s house for help — too late to save his family.

“July 23, 2007, was our personal holocaust,” Petit said Friday. “A holocaust caused by two who are completely evil and actually do not comprehend what they have done.”

Petit called his wife a friend, confidant and wonderful mother. He noted that Hayley would be in medical school by now and that Michaela loved to cook and sing.

“I lost my family and my home,” he said. “They were three special people. Your children are your jewels.”

Petit said he has difficulty sleeping and trusting. Family gatherings are subdued, he said, with no one quite sure what to do or say.

Jennifer’s sister, Cynthia Hawke-Renn, said via a video played in court that everyday items like gas, rope, bed posts and gas conjure horrific memories.

“There is no escaping the horrors of that night,” she said.

Petit’s father, William Petit Sr., said his son is not the same person now as he was in the days when he was a happy husband and father.

“Not only did we lose Jennifer, Hayley and Michaela, we have lost the Bill that we knew, and it is heartbreaking daily to watch him,” Petit said. “He puts on a brave face and tries to hide his anguish and despair by working hard.”

Petit has found what he calls occasional moments of peace, dedicating himself to a charity named for his family that raises money for education, the chronically ill and those affected by violence; and by campaigning for tougher laws, including the death penalty.

He has admitted he contemplated suicide many times. but this month he became engaged to a woman who volunteered at foundation events.

Petit has maintained his composure in court through three trials, even as the defense referred to him and his family as the “Petit posse.”

Komisarjevsky’s lawyers had worked to spare him the death penalty by describing sexual abuse their client endured as a child. The jury and the judge, who had been subjected to grim evidence including pictures of charred beds, rope used to tie up the family and autopsy photos — were unmoved.

The crime led to the defeat of a bill to outlaw the death penalty in Connecticut and sparked tougher state laws for repeat offenders and home invasions.

“This is a terrible sentence, but it is in truth a sentence you wrote for yourself with deeds of unimaginable horror and savagery on July 23, 2007,” Judge Jon Blue said.

Komisarjevsky conveyed a mixture of regret and insistence in court Friday, insisting that he didn’t intend for anyone to die, that he didn’t rape Michaela and that he didn’t start the fire.

“I wonder when the killing will end,” he said of his death sentence.

<a href="http://www.cbsnews.com/8301-201_162-57367823/long-road-ahead-for-conn-home-invasion-survivor/tag:news.google.com,2005:cluster=17593994140734Top StoriesSat, 28 Jan 2012 00:40:06 GMT”>Long road ahead for Conn. home invasion survivor

{ Comments on this entry are closed }

 Student charged in Utah high school bomb plot; police continue investigation

“It wasn’t like they were hanging out playing video games,” Roy Police Chief Gregory Whinham said Friday. “They put a lot of effort into it.”

Dallin Morgan, 18, and a 16-year-old friend were arrested Wednesday at Roy High School, about 30 miles north of Salt Lake City, after a fellow student reported that she received ominous text messages from one of the suspects.

“If I tell you one day not to go to school, make damn sure you and your brother are not there,” one message read, according to court records. “We ain’t gonna crash it, we’re just gonna kill and fly our way to a country that won’t send us back to the U.S.,” read another message.

While police don’t have a motive, one text message noted they sought “revenge on the world.”

The suspects say they were inspired by the deadly 1999 Columbine High School shootings in Littleton, Colo., and the younger suspect even visited the school last month to interview the principal about the shootings and security measures.

However, one suspect told authorities it was offensive to be compared to the Columbine shooters because “those killers only completed 1 percent of their plan,” according to a probable cause statement.

The teens had so studied their own school’s security system that they knew how to avoid being seen on the facility’s surveillance cameras, authorities said.

Whinham said the “very smart kids” had spent at least hundreds of dollars on flight simulator programs, books and manuals, studying them in anticipation of carrying out their plan to bomb an assembly at the 1,500-student high school.

While authorities said the suspects believed they could pull it off, experts said, it would have been a long shot.

Royal Eccles, manager at the Ogden-Hinckley Airport, about a mile from the school, said it would have been nearly impossible for the students to steal a plane or get the knowledge to fly one using flight simulator programs.

“It’s highly improbable,” Eccles said. “That’s how naive these kids are.”

Whinham said authorities searched two homes and two cars and found no explosives, but added that police continue to search other locations. The chief said it appeared that “a key component of their plan was not developed.”

“I wouldn’t want to say that they don’t have it or that they weren’t ready for it,” he said. “I’m just saying that we haven’t found anything that says they were ready for it yet.”

Whinham said it appeared the suspects, who have no criminal history, also had prepared alternate attack plans, but he declined to elaborate. He also declined to say whether any firearms were found during their searches.

“most houses have firearms in them,” he said. “this is the state of Utah.”

While authorities have said they have not found any explosives, they charged Morgan on Friday with possession of a weapon of mass destruction.

<a href="http://www.washingtonpost.com/local/education/utah-girl-credited-with-outing-plot-by-2-teens-to-bomb-school-during-assembly-flee-in-plane/2012/01/27/gIQAWhMKVQ_story.html?tid=pm_poptag:news.google.com,2005:cluster=17593993892819Top StoriesSat, 28 Jan 2012 00:59:27 GMT”>Student charged in Utah high school bomb plot; police continue investigation

{ Comments on this entry are closed }

Florida’s election laws undergoing changes

January 28, 2012

Once again, Florida and its elections laws are being challenged in the courts. The Republican-dominated Legislature passed several changes in the last week of the 2011 session, and Gov. Rick Scott (R.) signed the bill into law over the objections of thousands of citizens. The Democrat-controlled U.S. Senate Judiciary Subcommittee on the Constitution, Civil Rights [...]

Read the full article →

Millions in SOPA lobbying bucks gone to waste

January 27, 2012

Google blacked out its logo last week in opposition of the Stop Online Privacy Act and the Protect IP Act. NEW YORK (CNNMoney) — the controversial anti-piracy bills that attracted tens of millions of dollars of lobbying for and against the proposed laws ironically were killed by free publicity. "Old" media companies spent huge sums [...]

Read the full article →

Republican debate slugfest: Did Mitt hit hard enough?

January 27, 2012

(Credit:AP Photo/Matt Rourke) originally appeared on . Mitt Romney may not drink, but he was loaded when he entered last night’s debate in Jacksonville, Fla. He went after Newt Gingrich immediately and relentlessly. He scolded him, rendered him momentarily mute, and took answers about other topics and turned them into attacks on Gingrich on key [...]

Read the full article →