Albuquerque Journal

After years of pain, an ending

Man pleads no contest to beating former Cibola student with shovel in Sept. 2008

- BY KATY BARNITZ JOURNAL STAFF WRITER

The man accused of beating a teenage girl with a shovel inside her West Side home in 2008 pleaded no contest Thursday to attempted murder and aggravated burglary charges.

Justin Hansen, 34, faces up to 18 years in custody at sentencing, which is set for late July.

Brittani Marcell, then a 17-year-old Cibola High School senior, was so gravely injured that homicide detectives were sent to her West Side home to investigat­e.

During Thursday’s hearing before Judge Cindy Leos, prosecutor David Waymire said that, on Sept. 11, 2008, Marcell was attacked from behind as she returned home to meet her mother for lunch. When her mom arrived, Marcell was on the floor of the entryway, bloody and unconsciou­s, and a man was standing over her with a shovel.

The assailant escaped through a kitchen window.

Marcell’s case shocked the community, but it went unsolved for years. And, over those years, Marcell had to relearn to walk, talk and eat. She is deaf in one ear and blind in one eye. She has undergone 19 surgeries, her sister said, and has another next month.

Years before an arrest was

made, prosecutor­s filed an indictment against a male DNA profile retrieved from blood found on the broken kitchen window.

In October 2016, Marcell began to remember a man she used to chat with at the mall.

Eventually, she remembered a name: Justin Hansen.

She reported the memory to APD detectives, and when Hansen refused to offer a DNA sample, undercover detectives began to trail him. They collected a cup he discarded at a McDonald’s, and used the DNA taken from it to tie him to the crime scene.

Prosecutor­s went on to file another indictment in the case in 2017, this time naming Hansen.

And Waymire said that Marcell’s memories have continued to trickle in.

“She would testify that, as of a few months ago, she does now recall the face of the attacker and that it was Justin Hansen,” he said.

Waymire said a witness interviewe­d by the state remembered that Hansen used to visit and flirt with Marcell at the Cottonwood Mall, where she worked at a sunglass store.

Hansen had been set for a 10-day trial at the end of the month, which was expected to receive national coverage.

His plea hearing came the day after the Court of Appeals announced that it would not consider whether certain charges in the case should be dismissed because the statute of limitation­s expired before Hansen was indicted by name.

Hansen said little during Thursday’s hearing, and answered most of the judge’s questions with a quiet, “Yes, your honor.” His family accompanie­d him, but declined to comment on the agreement.

Marcell’s sisters have attended every hearing in the case, and they said that Thursday’s hearing offered a long-awaited sense of relief.

“We knew in our hearts he did this when this came about, and Brittani remembered his name, but he took responsibi­lity today and that goes a long way, to say that, I did this,” said Alicia Marcell. “I think that’s where we start to have some closure and healing.”

 ?? GREG SORBER/JOURNAL ?? Justin Hansen, right, leaves District Court with his attorney, Daniel Snyder, after pleading no contest Thursday to beating Brittani Marcell in 2008. The beating gravely injured Marcell.
GREG SORBER/JOURNAL Justin Hansen, right, leaves District Court with his attorney, Daniel Snyder, after pleading no contest Thursday to beating Brittani Marcell in 2008. The beating gravely injured Marcell.
 ?? GREG SORBER/JOURNAL ?? Alicia Marcell, left, is comforted by family friend Lori Ann McBride, at the plea agreement hearing in the beating of her sister.
GREG SORBER/JOURNAL Alicia Marcell, left, is comforted by family friend Lori Ann McBride, at the plea agreement hearing in the beating of her sister.
 ?? ADOLPHE PIERRE-LOUIS/JOURNAL ?? Brittani Marcell, left, and sister Jennifer wait for the bond hearing of her assailant, Justin Hansen, on April 11. Hansen pleaded no contest on Thursday.
ADOLPHE PIERRE-LOUIS/JOURNAL Brittani Marcell, left, and sister Jennifer wait for the bond hearing of her assailant, Justin Hansen, on April 11. Hansen pleaded no contest on Thursday.

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