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Friday, July 23, 2010

Black Nail Brigade

OFF THE WIRE
Let's see........ the woman can go to work, meet friends for lunch, shop, do whatever, and then go to jail when it's time to sleep! What the hell kind of sentence is that?
And Anita Jaffke... well.... she can't do anything, because Lora wanted pretty nails!

http://www.chicagotribune.com/news/local/northnorthwest/ct-met-lora-hunt-sentencing-20100722,0,2380013.story
Woman in nail-polish crash to spend nights in prison Driver sentenced to year and a half, but can work during day
Lora Hunt and her husband walk into the Lake County Court House before her sentencing hearing on Thursday. (Stacey Wescott, Chicago Tribune / July 21, 2010)
By Ruth Fuller, Special to the Tribune
10:01 p.m. CDT, July 22, 2010
Lora Hunt will spend her nights in jail for the next year and half for killing a woman she struck with her car while doing her nails.
The loved ones who asked the court for mercy on Thursday said the Morris, Ill., woman will be punishing herself for a lot longer.
"Every day she relives that day. She cries sometimes two, three or four times a day," said her husband of 33 years, Mark, who described for the judge how his once-joyful wife has been depressed and at times suicidal since the May 2, 2009, crash near Lake Zurich that killed Anita Zaffke, 56.
Whatever the toll on Hunt, however, Zaffke's family testified that it pales in comparison to what she took from them.
"I live every day thinking about how Anita had her life taken away from us due to someone's vanity and recklessness," Zaffke's husband Greg told the judge during a 3 1/2-hour sentencing hearing, during which Hunt could be heard sobbing. "I miss Anita with everything in my soul."
In his victim-impact statement, Zaffke's son, Greg Zaffke II, described how a special place of honor was reserved for his mother at his July 16 wedding.
"My mom was not there to help us plan and organize it. She wasn't there to share in the joy and excitement. That day, no tears of happiness would fall on my shoulder as she hugged me and my wife, Heidi," he said. "Lora Hunt took that time away from my mom and our family."
According to the sentence imposed by Judge Fred Foreman, Hunt, 49, will spend her nights in jail but will be allowed to leave during the day for work, counseling and community service. Foreman's sentence includes 240 hours of community service and 30 months of probation.
"If we can get the message out about this tragedy, maybe something positive can come out of this terrible tragedy," Foreman said.
A jury found Hunt guilty on May 6 of causing the Lake Zurich woman's death when Hunt's car rear-ended Zaffke's motorcycle when she was stopped at a red light. During the trial, Hunt said she'd been trying to make herself look presentable for a dinner date with her daughter but had applied only a couple of strokes of nail polish before putting the bottle down. She said she was watching the stoplight turn red when she slammed into the motorcycle.
Though Hunt could have received up to five years in prison, Greg Zaffke II said he felt the judge was "cognizant that a statement had to be made."
Still, prosecutor Mike Mermel sought the maximum sentence.
"Because the defendant wanted pretty nails, Anita Zaffke had to die," Mermel said. "She had literally turned two tons of glass and steel into a guided missile, and Anita Zaffke was her target."
Eight people testified to Hunt's strong character, including relatives, her minister and her therapist. They called her compassionate, caring and honest.
"She was the kind of person who let you know that it was OK to dance in the kitchen," Mark Hunt said. "No one ever left our house without a smile."
Hunt's attorney Jeff Tomczak argued that she should receive probation because she is a good person who was deeply remorseful.
Finally, the judge heard from Lora Hunt herself, who expressed that remorse in a tearful statement.
"I wish I could embrace Anita's family and tell them how sorry I am," Hunt said.
After the sentencing, Greg Zaffke II said he was not ready for such an interaction with Hunt.
"I've got family that's there to do that," he said. "My problem is that I can't hug my mom."
Hunt was immediately taken to jail to begin her sentence after Thursday's hearing.