Boston Herald

No bail in Newton murder case

- By Flint McColgan flint.mccolgan@bostonhera­ld.com

A Newton man charged with beating his wife to death with a baseball bat two days after she obtained a restrainin­g order against him pleaded not guilty to her murder. He was ordered held without bail.

Richard Hanson, 64, appeared yesterday morning behind glass in Middlesex Superior Court in Woburn after a grand jury on Aug. 17 indicted him for the murder of his wife, Nancy Hanson, on Aug. 15.

Almost exactly a month before, on the evening of July 15, prosecutor Megan McGovern said at the hearing, Newton Police arrived at 66 Brookline St. and found Hanson standing in his driveway and spattered with blood. McGovern alleged that Hanson told the officers he was “sorry” and that he had “caught her cheating.”

Nancy Hanson had obtained a restrainin­g order against her husband two days before, which the Newton Police had been attempting to serve, according to the Middlesex DA’s office.

Police had rushed to the home after receiving two phone calls, both at roughly 8:21 p.m. The first was from one of the couple’s children, who said that his father was hitting his mother with a baseball bat in the master bedroom.

Another call, this time an unidentifi­ed friend of Nancy Hanson’s, who said that she had been speaking with Nancy Hanson on the phone when she heard the words “Rich, no,” and then the sound of the phone dropping to the floor, according to the prosecutio­n’s statement of the case.

Then, she told police, she heard the children scream, “Dad, stop! You’re killing her!”

Police rushed to the second-floor master bedroom, the prosecutor said, and found Nancy Hanson lying on the floor, her head resting in a widening pool of her own blood. A baseball bat lay nearby, covered in blood.

Nancy Hanson was pronounced dead at Brigham and Women’s Faulkner Hospital at 9:38 that night. The medical examiner, according to the prosecutio­n, said her death was homicide caused by blunt-force trauma, with multiple injuries to her skull, multiple rib fractures, bruising to her upper torso, fractures to her forearms and defensive wounds to her fingers.

The couple’s three children are in the custody of the Department of Children and Families, according to McGovern. Clerk Magistrate Lucy Pasquale forbade Richard Hanson from having any contact with them, as they were witnesses to the alleged murder.

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