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thedrifter
01-30-07, 02:30 PM
Wife convicted of poisoning Marine husband

By Allison Hoffman - The Associated Press
Posted : Tuesday Jan 30, 2007 14:25:57 EST

SAN DIEGO — A jury Tuesday convicted a woman of murdering her Marine husband with arsenic to cash in on his $250,000 life insurance policy to finance a luxurious lifestyle.

The jury also found that Cynthia Sommer, 33, committed the first-degree murder with the special circumstances of poisoning and for financial gain.

Sommer could be sentenced to life in prison. She swallowed and stared as the verdict was read.

In the court’s spectator area, her mother burst into tears at the verdict and sobbed.

Prosecutors argued that Sommer wanted a more luxurious lifestyle than she could afford on the $1,700 monthly salary Sgt. Todd Sommer brought home and saw the military life insurance policy as a way to “set herself free.”

Sommer’s defense attorney, Robert Udell, told jurors that his client had lost her “knight in shining armor” and repeatedly returned to the absence of any paper trail linking Sommer to the arsenic.

With no direct evidence that Sommer was the source of the arsenic detected in her husband’s liver, Deputy District Attorney Laura Gunn relied heavily on circumstantial evidence of Sommer’s financial debt to show that she had a motive to kill her 23-year-old husband.

Todd Sommer was in top condition when he collapsed and died at the couple’s home on the Marine Corps’ Miramar base in San Diego.

His death was initially ruled a heart attack. Tests of his liver later found levels of arsenic 1,020 times above normal.

Cynthia Sommer’s friends and co-workers testified during the trial that she threw wild parties, got her breasts enlarged and had casual sex with multiple partners in the weeks after her husband’s collapse.

Gunn asserted that the defendant was the only person with the motive and access to poison the Marine.

Todd Sommer spiked a 103-degree fever and visited an urgent care clinic on base complaining of gastrointestinal pain a week before his death on Feb. 18, 2002.

His widow testified that he had been well enough the day before to drink beer during a family trip to Knott’s Berry Farm amusement park in Orange County.

Cynthia Sommer’s in-laws testified that she objected when they asked her to put her husband’s $250,000 death benefit in trust for herself, their baby and her three children from a previous marriage.

She cried when called to the stand Jan. 17, dabbing her eyes as she recounted her husband’s final moments.

But she also said during cross-examination that she hadn’t been able to envision her future with the Marine. The pair married in 1999.

She is now engaged to a former Marine she met two months after her husband’s death. She was extradited last March to California from her current home in West Palm Beach, Fla.

thedrifter
01-31-07, 08:26 AM
California wife poisoned Marine for breast implants

Tue Jan 30, 5:48 PM ET

A California woman was convicted on Tuesday of poisoning her Marine husband with arsenic to cash in his $250,000 life insurance policy and pay for breast implants and a party lifestyle.

Cynthia Sommer, a 33-year-old mother of four, faces life in prison without parole for the 2002 death of her husband Todd, 23, at the Marine Corps Air Station in Miramar, near San Diego.

In a largely circumstantial case, prosecutors said Sommer had at first convinced people she was a widow grieving the loss of her husband, whose official cause of death was given as a heart attack.

But prosecutors told the jury Sommer made four inquiries about money within five hours of her husband's death.

In the next few weeks, she paid $5,400 for breast implants, had sex with three male Marines and a woman, hosted loud parties at her house and participated in a wet T-shirt and thong contest in the Mexican border town of Tijuana, they said.

It was not clear how the poison was delivered but prosecutors said Sommer may have used the bait in retail ant traps. Tests in 2003 showed Todd Sommer had more than 1,000 times the normal level of arsenic in his liver.

Sommer, who was arrested in 2005, said she had her breasts enlarged to help herself feel better about her husband's death. She is currently engaged to a former Marine she met about two months after she was widowed.

Sommer was found guilty of murder, murder for financial gain and murder by poison. Prosecutors had decided not to seek the death penalty. She will be formally sentenced in March.

Ellie

thedrifter
01-31-07, 08:37 AM
Woman convicted in husband's poisoning death
Jurors find Cynthia Sommer, 33, guilty of using arsenic to poison her husband in their home at the Miramar base in 2002.
By Richard Marosi, Times Staff Writer
January 31, 2007

SAN DIEGO — A mother of four was convicted Tuesday of killing her Marine husband with arsenic to cash in on his $250,000 life insurance policy, some of which she used for breast implants and lavish parties.

Cynthia Sommer, 33, acted like a grieving widow immediately after her husband, Todd, 23, died in 2002, but within weeks she was holding loud parties, having sex with several men and dancing in a wet T-shirt contest in Tijuana, prosecutors and witnesses said during the monthlong trial.

Circumstantial evidence, including Sommer's spending spree and salacious behavior, helped convince jurors of her guilt despite the lack of direct proof, according to prosecutors.

A seven-woman, five-man jury convicted Sommer of first-degree murder along with the special circumstances of murder by poison and for financial gain. She is scheduled to be sentenced in March and could receive life in prison.

Defense attorney Robert Udell said Sommer had lost her "knight in shining armor" and now faces a potential life sentence because jurors appeared to believe that her behavior was inconsistent with that of a grieving widow.

"Everybody grieves in different ways," he said.

Todd Sommer, a Florida native, was in good health when he collapsed in February 2002 at the foot of the couple's bed in their home on the Marine Corps' Miramar base in San Diego. The couple had married in 1999 and had a son together. Cynthia Sommer had three children from a previous relationship.

During a frantic 911 call played for jurors, Sommer said she tried to save her husband's life by giving him cardiopulmonary resuscitation. The cause of death was listed as a heart attack on the original death certificate.

But investigators suspected foul play after a metals test of Todd Sommer's liver turned up a level of arsenic 1,020 times above normal. After a two-year probe, Cynthia was arrested in Florida in 2005 and extradited to San Diego.

During the trial, prosecutors suggested that the arsenic could have come from bait from ant traps, and that Cynthia Sommer was the only person who could have poisoned him. Without direct evidence, they tried to show that she had a strong motive.

In the hours after her husband's death, Sommer made repeated inquiries about the insurance money, said Deputy Dist. Atty. Laura Gunn.

In the following weeks, she paid $5,400 for breast enhancement surgery, had casual sex with three men and a woman, and took part in a wet T-shirt and thong contest, according to Gunn and witness testimony.

Udell said that Sommer did not spend the insurance money recklessly.

He said she placed $147,000 in a trust account for her children, and she had the breast implants to make herself feel better during the grieving period.

Sommer — who tattooed the dates of her husband's birth and death on her upper arm — testified tearfully about how she hugged him when he died, removed his ring and slipped it on her thumb.

But Gunn said Sommer's behavior after his death amounted to a celebration. Sommer is now engaged to a former Marine she met two months after her husband's death.

richard.marosi@latimes.com

Ellie