CLINTON - Amanda Hamm was sentenced to 10 years in prison for her role in the drowning deaths of her children, but the time she's already spent in jail means she likely will be released in a little more than a year.
Reactions ranged from rage to tears of joy outside the courtroom Thursday after she was sentenced for her child endangerment conviction.
The Clinton mother showed no emotion as Judge Stephen Peters handed down the sentence, which could have been as long as 20 years in prison.
"I am now faced with a life that holds promise for me and my future and realize how ironic this must sound because Christopher, Austin and Kyleigh no longer have similar horizons to look forward to," Hamm, 30, told the court.
She was convicted in December of child endangerment but acquitted of first-degree murder charges in the September 2003 drowning deaths of Christopher Hamm, 6, Austin Brown, 3, and Kyleigh Hamm, 23 months, in Clinton Lake.
Hamm's former boyfriend Maurice LaGrone Jr., 31, is serving a life sentence for first-degree murder in the deaths of Hamm's children. He was convicted in April.
Defense attorney Steve Skelton said after the hearing that Hamm could spend slightly more than a year in prison after she receives credit for three years in the county jail awaiting trial and day-for-day credit available to her for good behavior in prison.
"Now Amanda is looking at a release date 14 months from today," Skelton said.
Skelton called the verdict "excellent." He said Hamm was prepared for the possibility that the judge could give her the maximum sentence of 20 years in prison.
Skelton had asked the court to consider a sentence of eight years.
Hamm's mother, Ann Powers testified at the sentencing hearing that her daughter has matured since her arrest.
"She's paid the ultimate price by losing her kids because of abuse, and she's finally come to accept how she needs to change her life. She realizes she's worth more than that," said Powers.
Special prosecutor Roger Simpson asked Powers her opinion as to what justice the children deserved.
"I don't know how to answer that. I loved my grandchildren, and I love my daughter," Powers responded.
Greg Hamm, the father of Christopher, brushed past reporters after the sentencing. When asked his reaction to the judge's decision, he yelled an obscenity on his way out of the building.
Craig Brown said the sentence minimizes the death of his son, Austin. He said Hamm's statement to the judge Thursday was the first statement she has made since her arrest.
"She came in here to try to get the least amount of sentence of possible. Then she speaks up," Brown said.
Hamm was convicted by a Macon County jury of three counts of child endangerment, a lesser charge that was added as an option while she was on trial for nine counts of first-degree murder.
Special prosecutor Ed Parkinson joined family members in their disapproval of how the case concluded.
"This case is about three dead children. It's not about all the scientific crap we've heard the last three years. I'm disappointed in the verdict and sentence," he said.
Peters told the large audience in the courtroom that he took several factors into consideration in his decision to give Hamm a 10-year sentence. A record that included numerous traffic violations and five misdemeanor convictions was taken into account, along with the potential to rehabilitate Hamm.
Peters said testimony at both trials indicated that Hamm knew her children were physically and emotionally abused by LaGrone. Hamm's boyfriend admitted he put Austin's head in the oven as a so-called prank.
"These were three children who had no means of defending themselves," Peters said.
LaGrone previously claimed it was another prank to scare the children that led him to park Hamm's car close to the water on the lake's boat ramp. The car ended up rolling into the water and sinking with the three children in the back seat.
Hamm and LaGrone said they escaped from the car but could not save the children.
The judge also noted that Hamm used illegal drugs during the year she and the children lived with LaGrone.
In arguments for a maximum sentence of 20 years, the prosecution disagreed with testimony from Hamm's mother.
"Amanda Hamm has not paid the ultimate price. Her children paid the ultimate price," Simpson said.
Simpson contended that Hamm was responsible for the children's deaths because she put her boyfriend's needs over those of the children.
"This was a crime of selfishness," he said.
Edith Brady-Lunny can be reached at eblunny@pantagraph.com.
Posted in Local on Friday, February 2, 2007 12:00 am Updated: 12:07 pm.
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