The Mercury (Pottstown, PA)

Virginia man pleads guilty to killing 2 college students

- By Larry O’Dell

CHARLOTTES­VILLE, VA. >> A convicted rapist pleaded guilty Wednesday to killing two Virginia college students and avoided the death penalty by taking a deal that calls for him to spend the rest of his life in prison.

Jesse LeRoy Matthew Jr., 34, was sentenced to four consecutiv­e life terms when he pleaded guilty to two counts of first-degree murder and two counts of abduction with the intent to defile in the deaths of Hannah Graham and Morgan Harrington, two remarkably similar murder cases that amplified concerns about campus safety.

Matthew looked directly at family members during his plea hearing but showed no emotion. He said through his attorney that “he is very sorry and he loves his family very much.”

Graham’s mother, Susan Graham, said her daughter accomplish­ed great things, but in a way people never would’ve imagined — she enabled law enforcemen­t to apprehend a “serial rapist” who had been “hiding in plain sight in Charlottes­ville for years.”

“She is a heroine,” Graham’s mother said.

After Graham’s death, Matthew was chargedwit­h a felony that empowered police to swab his cheek for a DNA sample. Authoritie­s have said that sample connected Matthew to a 2005 sexual assault in northern Virginia and the 2009 disappeara­nce of Virginia Tech student Morgan Harrington.

He was convicted in the rape case and sentenced to three life terms.

According to authoritie­s, Graham and Harrington were young women in vulnerable straits when they vanished in Charlottes­ville five years apart. Harrington, 20, disappeare­d in 2009 after she stepped out of a University of Virginia arena during a Metallica concert and was unable to get back in.

Graham, an 18-year-old University of Virginia student, vanished after having dinner and attending parties off campus in 2014. She was captured on surveillan­ce video walking unsteadily, and sometimes running, past a service station and a restaurant. She texted a friend that shewas lost.

Additional video showed Graham crossing Charlottes­ville’s downtown pedestrian mall, then leaving a restaurant with Matthew, his arm wrapped around her.

Graham’s disappeara­nce, which came at a time of rising national concern about sexual assaults and other crimes on college campuses, prompted a massive search. Her body was found five weeks later on abandoned property in Albemarle County, about 12 miles from the Charlottes­ville campus and 6 miles froma hayfield where Har-rington’s remains had been found in January 2010.

Graham’s mother said Matthew dumped her daughter’s body “like a bag of trash” to be picked over by buzzards.

Prosecutor Robert Tracci said the plea deal serves the interest of justice in several ways, including avoiding the revictimiz­ation of the Harrington and Graham families that would result from a long and highly publicized trial.

After police named Mat-thew a person of interest in Graham’s disappeara­nce, he fled and was later apprehende­d on a beach in southeast Texas. He was charged and his cheek was swabbed for a DNA sample. That sample connected Matthew to a 2005 sexual assault in Fairfax, a Virginia suburb of Washington, according to authoritie­s.

 ?? STEVE HELBER — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE ?? In this file photo, JesseMatth­ew is escorted out of court after a hearing on two different murder charges in Charlottes­ville, Va. Matthew, charged in the slayings of two Virginia college students, is scheduled to appear in Albemarle County Circuit Court onWednesda­y.
STEVE HELBER — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE In this file photo, JesseMatth­ew is escorted out of court after a hearing on two different murder charges in Charlottes­ville, Va. Matthew, charged in the slayings of two Virginia college students, is scheduled to appear in Albemarle County Circuit Court onWednesda­y.

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