Current:Home > FinancePamela Smart, serving life, accepts responsibility for her husband’s 1990 killing for the first time -Wealth Harmony Labs
Pamela Smart, serving life, accepts responsibility for her husband’s 1990 killing for the first time
View
Date:2025-04-13 22:56:50
CONCORD, N.H. (AP) — Pamela Smart, who is serving life in prison for plotting with her teenage student to have her husband killed in 1990, accepted full responsibility for his death for the first time in a videotaped statement released Tuesday as part of her latest sentence reduction request.
Smart, 56, was a 22-year-old high school media coordinator when she began an affair with a 15-year-old boy who later fatally shot her husband, Gregory Smart, in Derry, New Hampshire. The shooter was freed in 2015 after serving a 25-year sentence. Though Pamela Smart denied knowledge of the plot, she was convicted of being an accomplice to first-degree murder and other crimes and sentenced to life without parole.
Smart has been incarcerated for nearly 34 years. She said in the statement that she began to “dig deeper into her own responsibility” through her experience in a writing group that “encouraged us to go beyond and to spaces that we didn’t want to be in.
“For me that was really hard, because going into those places, in those spaces is where I found myself responsible for something I desperately didn’t want to be responsible for, my husband’s murder,” she said, her voice quavering. “I had to acknowledge for the first time in my own mind and my own heart how responsible I was, because I had deflected blame all the time, I think, almost as if it was a coping mechanism, because the truth of being so responsible was very difficult for me.”
She asked to have an “honest conversation” with New Hampshire’s five-member Executive Council, which approves state contracts and appointees to the courts and state agencies, and with Gov. Chris Sununu. The council rejected her latest request in 2022 and Smart appealed to the state Supreme Court, which dismissed her petition last year.
Val Fryatt, a cousin of Gregory Smart, told The Associated Press that Smart “danced around it” and accepted full responsibility “without admitting the facts around what made her ‘fully responsible.’”
Fryatt noted that Smart didn’t mention her cousin’s name in the video, “not even once.”
Messages seeking comment on the petition and statement were sent to the council members, Sununu, and the attorney general’s office.
Smart is serving time at Bedford Hills Correctional Facility in Westchester County, New York. She has earned two master’s degrees behind bars and has also tutored fellow inmates, been ordained as a minister and been part of an inmate liaison committee. She said she is remorseful and has been rehabilitated.
The trial was a media circus and one of America’s first high-profile cases about a sexual affair between a school staff member and a student. Joyce Maynard wrote “To Die For” in 1992, drawing from the Smart case. That inspired a 1995 film of the same name, starring Nicole Kidman and Joaquin Phoenix. The killer, William Flynn, and three other teens cooperated with prosecutors. They served shorter sentences and have been released.
veryGood! (676)
Related
- Nearly 400 USAID contract employees laid off in wake of Trump's 'stop work' order
- Janet Yellen says the Trump administration’s China policies left the US more vulnerable
- Florida teachers file federal suit against anti-pronoun law in schools
- Father, stepmother and uncle of 10-year-old girl found dead in UK home deny murder charges
- Which apps offer encrypted messaging? How to switch and what to know after feds’ warning
- Amazon won’t have to pay hundreds of millions in back taxes after winning EU case
- Hungry, thirsty and humiliated: Israel’s mass arrest campaign sows fear in northern Gaza
- Who are the Von Erich brothers? What to know about 'The Iron Claw's devastating subject
- North Carolina justices rule for restaurants in COVID
- US judge to weigh cattle industry request to halt Colorado wolf reintroduction
Ranking
- EU countries double down on a halt to Syrian asylum claims but will not yet send people back
- With a rising death toll, Kenya's military evacuates people from flood-hit areas
- 11 students hospitalized after fire extinguisher discharges in Virginia school
- A leader of Taiwan’s Nationalist Party visits China as the island’s presidential election looms
- Charges tied to China weigh on GM in Q4, but profit and revenue top expectations
- China’s economy is forecast to slow sharply in 2024, the World Bank says, calling recovery ‘fragile’
- Why Argentina’s shock measures may be the best hope for its ailing economy
- Paris Saint-Germain advances in tense finish to Champions League group. Porto also into round of 16
Recommendation
Civic engagement nonprofits say democracy needs support in between big elections. Do funders agree?
Hong Kong places arrest bounties on activists abroad for breaching national security law
Austrian court acquits Blackwater founder and 4 others over export of modified crop-spraying planes
Anxiety and resignation in Argentina after Milei’s economic shock measures
Trump invites nearly all federal workers to quit now, get paid through September
The Shohei Ohani effect: Jersey sales, ticket prices soar after signing coveted free agent
Former British soldier to stand trial over Bloody Sunday killings half a century ago
In 'Asgard's Wrath 2,' VR gaming reaches a new God mode