NEWS
Man whose wife disappeared during their honeymooned has
been sentenced to 8 years in prison for involuntary manslaughter
A man whose wife
disappeared while they honeymooned at sea has been sentenced by a federal judge
to eight years in prison for involuntary manslaughter.
Lewis Bennett,
42, apologized to the family of Isabella Hellman during a Tuesday
hearing before U.S. District Judge Federico Moreno in Miami. He waived
his right to appeal.
Defense attorneys
sought a 7-year sentence, a year lower than the maximum number spelled out in a
plea agreement reached last November. Bennett was originally charged with
murder, with investigators alleging he intentionally tried to sink the boat,
but later dropped the charges. "It's not because I expect that he
will commit this crime again," Judge Moreno said. "Sentencing is for
punishment."
Before Moreno
announced his decision, Bennett, a dual citizen of Australia and the United
Kingdom, asked the judge that he let him get out of prison sooner so he could
continue to raise the couple's daughter, who was an infant when the mother
vanished. Emelia Bennett turns 3 in July and is being raised by his parents in
Scotland.
"If you may
permit me to be with my daughter as soon as possible," Bennett said.
"I want to bring her up in a manner that is respectful to my wife's
wishes." But Moreno sided with prosecutors and chose eight years in prison
as the sentence and three years on supervised release.
Hellman disappeared
as the couple sailed off the Bahamas in May 2017. A statement from the U.S.
Attorney's office says Bennett had experience sailing, including training on
emergency procedures and had previously traveled from St. Marteen to Australia.
His wife, a naturalized U.S. citizen born in Cuba, had not trained in emergency
sailing procedures and had less experience, prosecutors said.
The couple had been
married for three months when they set sail to St. Marteen, Puerto Rico and
Cuba for a delayed honeymoon in late April. After they left Cuba on May 14,
Bennett asked Hellman take over control of the boat for the night so he could
go rest in the boat's cabin, according to court documents. He didn't require
her to wear a life jacket, harness or personal locator, prosecutors said in the
statement.
He said he woke up
when the craft hit something, and Hellman was missing. Assistant U.S. attorney
Kurt Lunkenheimer said on Tuesday that Bennett "did not search for her
diligently enough despite him being an experienced sailor."
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