The Associated Press March 5, 2009, file photo.
|
A woman convicted of
fatally poisoning her husband with antifreeze and trying to kill her
daughter and frame her for the crime has died in prison.
Stacey Castor, 48, died
Saturday morning while serving 51 years to life at Bedford Hills
Correctional Facility for Women in Westchester County, the Onondaga
County district attorney's office said. An autopsy will be conducted.
Castor
was convicted in 2009 of killing her husband David Castor and trying to
kill her daughter Ashley Wallace as part of a plot to pin the murder on
her.
Stacey
Castor was also convicted of filing a fake will to inherit her second
husband's estate and was suspected of fatally poisoning her first
husband in 2000.
The judge who sentenced Castor said she was guilty of the most reprehensible crimes he'd ever seen.
"In my
34 years in the criminal justice system as a lawyer and a judge, I have
seen serial killers, contract killers, killers of every variety and
stripe," Onondaga County Judge Joseph Fahey said. "But, I have to say,
Mrs. Castor, you are in a class all by yourself."
The case was featured on an episode of "Forensic Files."
David
Castor's death at 48 in August 2005 was initially considered a suicide,
but investigators later determined he didn't knowingly drink ethylene
glycol, a toxic chemical found in antifreeze.
Stacey
Castor was charged in September 2007, just days after investigators in
neighboring Cayuga County exhumed the body of Michael Wallace, her first
husband and the father of her two children. His cause of death had
originally been ruled a heart attack, but after the exhumation,
authorities ruled the 2000 death a homicide caused by ingesting ethylene
glycol.
Stacey
Castor wasn't charged in Wallace's killing, but prosecutors presented
evidence during trial that she was involved as they built their case
against her. Prosecutors said she killed her husbands to collect on
their life insurance policies and estates.
Prosecutors
said Stacey Castor poisoned David Castor in September 2007 by using a
kitchen baster to slip him the antifreeze, then staged the scene to make
it appear he was depressed, had gotten drunk and killed himself by
downing the toxic liquid.
When
authorities were closing in on her, prosecutors said, Castor decided to
kill her daughter Ashley Wallace and frame her for killing both
husbands. She knocked Wallace out with sleeping pills, then used a
teaspoon to feed her vodka and prescription pills over a 17-hour window,
prosecutors said.
Castor
then wrote a 750-word suicide note on her computer that claimed to be
from her daughter confessing to killing the men, prosecutors said.
In the
suicide note, which Wallace denied writing, the word antifreeze is
written as "anti-free" in four places.
An investigator testified earlier
that Castor said "anti-free" during an interview. Castor acknowledged
saying "anti-free" but said she had cut herself off mid-word because she
meant to say something else.
Investigators
also determined that the note was written while Castor was at home and
her daughter was at school, prosecutors said.
Castor maintained her innocence and appealed her case for years.
Source-Associated press.
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