Huguely to serve 23 years
Former University student George Huguely was sentenced to 23 years in prison Thursday after a judge effectively reduced his jury-recommended sentence by three years. His lawyers say he will appeal the sentence.
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Former University student George Huguely was sentenced to 23 years in prison Thursday after a judge effectively reduced his jury-recommended sentence by three years. His lawyers say he will appeal the sentence.
An old adage holds that “defense wins championships.” While Virginia football teams of recent memory embraced that mantra, the 2012 Cavaliers will need more this year from their experienced offense.
The 2012 Virginia football team just became one marquee quarterback deeper.
The Atlanta Hawks selected former Virginia basketball player Mike Scott with the 43rd overall pick in last night’s NBA Draft.
It should have been a Senior Night to remember.
An undersized Virginia men's basketball team constantly fought foul trouble and saw its best scorer suffer his worst performance of the season Saturday, yet it fell one shot short of taking No. 7 North Carolina to overtime.
A jury convicted former University student George Huguely for the second-degree murder of Yeardley Love, as well as grand larceny, and recommended he serve a 26 year prison sentence. This sentence would include 25 years for the second-degree murder and one year for grand larceny.
After nearly nine hours waiting for a verdict, former University student George Huguely stared straight ahead as a jury found him guilty of grand larceny and the second-degree murder of his former girlfriend Yeardley Love. Later the same evening, the jury recommended Huguely serve a 26-year prison term, comprising 25 years for the second-degree murder conviction and one year for grand larceny.
The prosecution and defense in the murder trial of former University student George Huguely rested their cases Saturday and presented closing arguments. The jury will begin deliberations Wednesday. Huguely stands charged with the first-degree murder of former University student Yeardley Love.
The prosecution and defense in the murder trial of former University student George Huguely rested their cases Saturday and presented closing arguments. The jury will begin deliberations Wednesday.
Court proceedings ended early yesterday, as former University student George Huguely's defense attorney Rhonda Quagliana remained ill, and the defendant expressed discomfort at continuing without both his counsel present. Huguely's other attorney, Francis McQ. Lawrence, presented five witnesses before court recessed for the day, expecting the trial to continue today.
Former University student George Huguely's defense team opened its presentation yesterday afternoon by claiming ex-girlfriend Yeardley Love died from suffocating while lying face down on her pillow. The prosecution claims she died from blunt force trauma inflicted by Huguely.
Jurors viewed video testimony Friday, which was taken after the detainment of former University student George Huguely, showing his apparent shock at the death of ex-girlfriend and former University student Yeardley Love. Huguely stands accused of the first-degree murder of Love.
In the backdrop of last night's 68-44 thrashing of Wake Forest beamed Mike Scott's face - plastered on a fan's hand-crafted dollar bill with the slogan, "In Scott We Trust."
With my nerves still frazzled from another near-Virginia collapse, I'm instituting a drinking game for this column.
Earlier this week, Boston College men's basketball coach Steve Donahue conceded that his inexperienced squad would struggle to replicate Virginia Tech's smothering defensive strategy for stopping Virginia's senior forward Mike Scott. Scott proved the Eagles coach right in a big way as No. 19 Virginia blasted Boston College last night, 66-49.
The Virginia track and field team will compete in the Penn State National Invitational this weekend, with seniors Mark Amirault and Morgane Gay, two All-American cross country runners, making their season debut.
He has never fully materialized as an offensive threat and his ball-handling is suspect at best, but when senior Assane Sene fractured his right ankle Jan. 20, the 7-foot center left a big hole in the Virginia men's basketball team's already undersized lineup.
The longtime face of Virginia women's basketball will now join the Virginia Sports Hall of Fame.
For once, coach Tony Bennett's men's basketball team will be considered the offensive juggernaut on the hardwood.