Chicago Sun-Times

British man gets 45 years for his part in murder committed with Northweste­rn professor

- BY MATTHEW HENDRICKSO­N, STAFF REPORTER mhendricks­on@suntimes.com | @MHendricks­onCST

Andrew Warren, the British man who participat­ed in the brutal slaying of Trenton Cornell at a former Northweste­rn University professor’s River North apartment in 2017, had few words to say at his sentencing hearing Wednesday.

Warren, 61, initially declined to speak and asked his attorney to tell Cornell’s family he was sorry on his behalf. But when the judge asked if he had a statement, Warren ultimately decided to speak up.

“I just want to say that I’m really so sorry, that’s all I have to say,” Warren said quickly.

Cook County Judge Charles Burns then sentenced him to 45 years in prison.

Warren’s sentence was expected: He pleaded guilty in 2019 to the murder and agreed to testify against his co-defendant, Wyndham Lathem, at trial as part of a deal with prosecutor­s. Under the deal, prosecutor­s said they would recommend a 45-year prison term and wouldn’t oppose his efforts if he tried to be transferre­d back to the United Kingdom to serve his sentence.

Under state law, Warren would be required to serve his full sentence in Illinois, minus credit for 1,658 days he was held in custody.

But, if he were to return to England, which grants time off sentences for good behavior, he could face significan­tly less prison time.

At Lathem’s trial last fall, prosecutor­s told jurors it was no “sweetheart deal” — there was no guarantee such efforts would work, or that authoritie­s in the U.K. would agree to his transfer.

Lathem, 47, who Burns said he believed was the driving force behind the killing, was sentenced to 53 years in prison last month.

Lathem, a renowned university researcher for his work on the bubonic plague, paid to have Warren fly to Chicago, where they met face-to-face for the first time days before Cornell’s murder.

The two had met over the internet, where they flirted, discussed marrying each other and planned to end their lives in a suicide pact, Warren testified.

He did not expect to return home from his trip to Chicago, he told jurors.

Lathem “was going to cut me open ... and fatally wound me,” Warren said at trial; he was then supposed to shoot Lathem.

Instead, Lathem decided they were going to kill Cornell, 26, whom Lathem had been dating.

On the night of the murder, Lathem invited Warren to his apartment to help kill Cornell and film it. When Warren arrived, Latham handed him a knife and then crept into a bedroom where Cornell was asleep, Warren said.

Lathem began stabbing Cornell first and Warren later joined in, Warren admitted.

Cornell was found stabbed more than 70 times on July 27, 2017.

Warren “could have stopped this crime from happening,” but chose not to, Cornell’s mother, Charlotte Cornell, said in her statement in court Wednesday.

“Instead of ending his [own] life, he ended a person’s life who he didn’t even know,” she added.

After the hearing, Charlotte Cornell said she agreed with Warren’s sentence and said she appreciate­d that he had come forward “to tell the truth.”

“If it weren’t for Andrew Warren telling the prosecutor­s and the detectives everything that happened, this case might have been a lot harder for them to put together,” Charlotte Cornell said.

“It’s a strange feeling,” she said of having some empathy for the person who killed her son. She noted that Warren, when asked at Lathem’s trial, said he didn’t know why he participat­ed in the murder and said, “I never will.”

“We’ll never know why either,” she said.

 ?? ?? Andrew Warren is escorted by Chicago police in 2017.
Andrew Warren is escorted by Chicago police in 2017.
 ?? ?? Trenton Cornell
Trenton Cornell

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