Two brothers who roughed up their grandmother and urinated on her and her clothes were sentenced to a year in jail Monday after a judge repeatedly asked why the two men did what they did.
Michael Levi Hansen Jr., 20; and Christopher Eugene Hansen, 22, previously pleaded guilty to abuse of an elderly adult, a class A misdemeanor; and lewdness and criminal mischief, both class B misdemeanors.
Third District Judge Robin Reese sentenced the pair to a year in jail, with 95 days of credit for time already served. The judge imposed 180 days of jail time for the other two offenses but suspended the time behind bars.
Reese also imposed a year of probation with orders to get mental health and substance abuse evaluations and whatever counseling is recommended. He ordered no contact with the grandmother until a probation officer permits it, directed the brothers to get either a high school diploma or GED, and required a fine and payment for restitution.
Beyond that, the judge had a question.
"How do you explain this?" Reese asked. "It's hard for me to understand why you behaved the way you did toward your grandmother."
Christopher Hansen said he wasn't thinking clearly because he was distraught over the recent death of his mother, who died of a drug overdose, and Hansen said he also was drunk at the time.
"My grandmother was just there," he said "My anger just got the better of me."
Christopher Hansen teared up as he apologized to his grandmother, Rita Avery, for what he did.
"I love her — I didn't mean it," he said, tearfully.
Michael Hansen also apologized to Avery: "I know I love her, and I'd like to have a relationship like we used to."
Michael Hansen said he originally blamed Avery for his mother's death, but he should not have done that. He mistakenly thought Avery somehow had answers for what caused his mother's death but said he was wrong to do what he did. "There is no excuse."
Meanwhile, Rita Avery sounded a conciliatory note during her victim impact statement.
"I regret what happened, but I want them to know I love them and I forgive them," she told the judge. "I really feel like we can go forward in this relationship."
- Everything you wanted to know about the Salt...
- People magazine to publish Elizabeth Smart...
- LDS Church toughens stand against 'improper'...
- 'World's largest rope swing' off Corona Arch...
- BYU recovers stolen painting from Swiss...
- Living Planet Aquarium moving to Draper
- Mountain man charged with southern Utah cabin...
- The war on boys: Sex, media and violence
- Standoff closes section of I-15 near Beaver
- Arches and Canyonlands bottle ban sparks feud
- Vets say 'stolen valor' issue before Supreme...
- Utah House passes abstinence-only sex...
- Education bill requiring suicide training...
- House committee passes $3M charter school bill
- Utah House passes abstinence-only sex...
- Fire destroys Carbon County home, nearby cars
- LDS Church toughens stand against...
89 - The war on boys: Young men losing...
58 - Elizabeth Smart marries in Hawaiian...
44 - The war on boys: Sex, media and violence
29 - BYU recovers stolen painting from Swiss...
23 - Documents reveal disturbing influence...
20 - Mitt Romney relishes Olympic...
20 - Bill would require all Utah schools...
20





DeseretNews.com encourages a civil dialogue among its readers. We welcome your thoughtful comments.
— About comments