Bluff, Fedorowicz get life in prison
Prosecutors call verdict a victory for murdered 3-year-old

Published: Friday, Aug. 20 1999 12:00 a.m. MDT

Calling their crime "as dastardly a deed as can be done," Judge Dennis Frederick sentenced Ferosa Bluff and Andrew Fedorowicz to life in prison Friday.

In July, a two-woman, six-man jury needed just 90 minutes to find Bluff, 27, and Fedorowicz, 46, guilty of murder, a first-degree felony; child abuse and and sexual abuse of a child, second-degree felonies; for torturing Bluff's 3-year-old daughter, Rebecca, to death last year.Bluff and Fedorowicz showed little emotion as Frederick gave them maximum prison sentences -- consecutive terms of five years to life and two terms of one to 15 years.

Neither addressed the court before being sentenced.

Prosecutors called the sentence a victory for Rebecca.

"This is the maximum penalty the law allows for what they did," said prosecutor Robert Stott. "I think Andrew's going to serve a long, long time. I think Ferosa is going to serve a long, long time unless she changes her outlook."

Bluff's attorney, Ed Brass, said Bluff maintains her innocence and still claims Rebecca simply fell down the stairs before her death.

The judge saw it otherwise.

"It is incomprehensible to this court to believe that there was no indication by either of you two that this child was in extremes before she died," said a red-faced Frederick.

Before sentencing, defense attorneys asked that Bluff and Fedorowicz only be sentenced for the murder charge.

"You can't segregate (the charges) out and punish them separately under the double jeopardy law," Brass argued.

Stott argued the double jeopardy law -- punishing someone with multiple charges for the same incident -- did not apply in this case since the girl's abuse came at least 48 house before her death.

"All of us are very well aware that the evidence presented was that this girl was abused over time," Stott said. "This is not a single account."

Brass requested Bluff undergo a psychological evaluation and asked that "for her protection," Bluff be confined in a county jail rather than the Utah State Prison.

"I don't know the situation at the women's prison," Stott said. "Certainly people who commit crimes against children are not held in high esteem by people at the prison."

Frederick gave Bluff and Fedorowicz credit for their 302 days already served, but added, "I consider you (will) each spend, if not the rest of your lives, a considerable portion of your lives in prison."

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