Man gets prison in frying pan attack on judge wife

Published: Wednesday, Jan. 14, 2009 2:38 p.m. MST
 |  E-MAIL | PRINT | FONT + - 

LAS VEGAS — The husband of a former Nevada state judge was sentenced Wednesday to three to 10 years in prison for hitting his wife in the head with a frying pan at their home.

Edward Lee Halverson, 49, stunned a Las Vegas courtroom by saying he "clocked" former judge Elizabeth Halverson on Sept. 4 because she threatened to stab him.

"If she wouldn't have pulled a knife on me and threatened me, I wouldn't have clocked her," Halverson said, standing in shackles before the judge. "I defended myself."

Elizabeth Halverson, who was banned from the bench for mishandling cases and mistreating staff, uses bottled oxygen and a motorized scooter.

"You didn't 'clock' your wife," Clark County District Court Judge David Barker replied. "You beat your wife. To the point where I saw multiple lacerations on her. The description provided of the crime scene was more than a simple 'clock.'"

Halverson's self-defense claim contradicted what he told the judge when he pleaded an equivalent of no contest on Oct. 24 to battery domestic violence with use of a weapon resulting in substantial bodily harm. He said at the time that he couldn't remember hitting his wife.

Elizabeth Halverson, 51, denied she had a knife and asked the judge to reject the plea deal.

Story continues below

"There was no knife in the room. That's the first I heard of it," said the former judge, removing a straw hat to show scars on her head and around her right eye.

Elizabeth Halverson said she is having difficulty recovering from head, hand and leg injuries after being hospitalized for more than two weeks.

"It's not right," she said, sobbing. "The doctors are saying it's going to take months and months for my head to be better. I'm going to spend more time than this man is going to spend. How is this justice? Three years doesn't begin to make sense."

Halverson's mother, Maria Veimau, 73, of San Francisco, pleaded with the judge to impose the maximum sentence on her son-in-law for what she called an attempt to murder her daughter.

Halverson, who was dismissed as a state judge Nov. 17 by the Nevada Commission on Judicial Discipline, said she has been unable to read, write or concentrate enough to work. She said later she can no longer pay two lawyers she hired to represent her during plea negotiations.

The judge stuck with the plea deal under which the state dropped an attempted murder charge in exchange for a so-called Alford plea, in which Edward Halverson acknowledged the state had evidence to prove the remaining charge against him. He could have faced three to 40 years in prison if convicted of attempted murder with a weapon.

Comments

You can be the first to comment on this story.

previousnext

Latest comments

Ive been in reparative therapy, Ive prayed, fasted, attended temple and...

May the jone's be blessed with comfort now and in the future. That they may...

Well Well,the Government is stepping in to change a policy it forced on the...

I agree, this man is a war hero, and should be able to do almost anything he...

Obama: Plan to 'jump-start' hiring

ALL of you anti-government folks, stop accepting Social Security, Medicare,...

C.J. Miles will play, won't start

I am excited to see him back out there again. He had his best offseason best...

All-MWC football awards

look at his numbers. totally unimpressive. It's a shame he made the all...

It is amazing how out of touch with reality BYU is, they still continue to...

Who's in, who's out for 2010?

"But in Utah politics, some people keep trying to get on the team, or off the...

What a shame.. A shame that they are not made into boots

Advertisements