Current:Home > MyPamela Smart, serving life, accepts responsibility for her husband’s 1990 killing for the first time -ProsperityStream Academy
Pamela Smart, serving life, accepts responsibility for her husband’s 1990 killing for the first time
View
Date:2025-04-13 09:27:55
CONCORD, N.H. (AP) — Pamela Smart, who is serving life in prison for plotting with her teenage student to have her husband killed in 1990, accepted full responsibility for his death for the first time in a videotaped statement released Tuesday as part of her latest sentence reduction request.
Smart, 56, was a 22-year-old high school media coordinator when she began an affair with a 15-year-old boy who later fatally shot her husband, Gregory Smart, in Derry, New Hampshire. The shooter was freed in 2015 after serving a 25-year sentence. Though Pamela Smart denied knowledge of the plot, she was convicted of being an accomplice to first-degree murder and other crimes and sentenced to life without parole.
Smart has been incarcerated for nearly 34 years. She said in the statement that she began to “dig deeper into her own responsibility” through her experience in a writing group that “encouraged us to go beyond and to spaces that we didn’t want to be in.
“For me that was really hard, because going into those places, in those spaces is where I found myself responsible for something I desperately didn’t want to be responsible for, my husband’s murder,” she said, her voice quavering. “I had to acknowledge for the first time in my own mind and my own heart how responsible I was, because I had deflected blame all the time, I think, almost as if it was a coping mechanism, because the truth of being so responsible was very difficult for me.”
She asked to have an “honest conversation” with New Hampshire’s five-member Executive Council, which approves state contracts and appointees to the courts and state agencies, and with Gov. Chris Sununu. The council rejected her latest request in 2022 and Smart appealed to the state Supreme Court, which dismissed her petition last year.
Val Fryatt, a cousin of Gregory Smart, told The Associated Press that Smart “danced around it” and accepted full responsibility “without admitting the facts around what made her ‘fully responsible.’”
Fryatt noted that Smart didn’t mention her cousin’s name in the video, “not even once.”
Messages seeking comment on the petition and statement were sent to the council members, Sununu, and the attorney general’s office.
Smart is serving time at Bedford Hills Correctional Facility in Westchester County, New York. She has earned two master’s degrees behind bars and has also tutored fellow inmates, been ordained as a minister and been part of an inmate liaison committee. She said she is remorseful and has been rehabilitated.
The trial was a media circus and one of America’s first high-profile cases about a sexual affair between a school staff member and a student. Joyce Maynard wrote “To Die For” in 1992, drawing from the Smart case. That inspired a 1995 film of the same name, starring Nicole Kidman and Joaquin Phoenix. The killer, William Flynn, and three other teens cooperated with prosecutors. They served shorter sentences and have been released.
veryGood! (6)
Related
- Meta donates $1 million to Trump’s inauguration fund
- Trump, other defendants to be arraigned next week in Georgia election case
- Top CEOs call on Biden administration to address migrant influx in New York
- Hurricane Idalia makes landfall in Florida, threatens 'catastrophic storm surge': Live updates
- British golfer Charley Hull blames injury, not lack of cigarettes, for poor Olympic start
- Wagner Group leader killed in plane crash buried in private funeral
- Grammy-winning poet J. Ivy praises the teacher who recognized his potential: My whole life changed
- Hurricane Idalia menaces Florida’s Big Bend, the ‘Nature Coast’ far from tourist attractions
- Kentucky Gov. Andy Beshear ready to campaign for Harris-Walz after losing out for spot on the ticket
- Watch meteor momentarily turn night into day as fireball streaks across Colorado night sky
Ranking
- US appeals court rejects Nasdaq’s diversity rules for company boards
- Guatemala’s president-elect faces legal challenges that seek to weaken him. Here’s what’s happening
- Former death row inmate pleads guilty to murder and is sentenced to 46 1/2 years in prison
- Judge finds defrocked cardinal not competent to stand trial for sex assault
- Vance jokes he’s checking out his future VP plane while overlapping with Harris at Wisconsin airport
- South Korean auto supplier plans $72 million plant in Georgia to build electric vehicle parts
- Could Hurricane Idalia make a return trip to Florida? Another storm did.
- 3M to pay $6 billion to settle claims it sold defective earplugs to U.S. military
Recommendation
Illinois Gov. Pritzker calls for sheriff to resign after Sonya Massey shooting
On Maui, a desperate plea to tourists: please return
Why are hurricane names retired? A look at the process and a list of retired names
Defendant in Georgia election interference case asks judge to unseal records
Spooky or not? Some Choa Chu Kang residents say community garden resembles cemetery
EPA head says he’s ‘proud” of decision to block Alaska mine and protect salmon-rich Bristol Bay
What makes Idalia so potent? It’s feeding on intensely warm water that acts like rocket fuel
Much of Florida's Gulf Coast is under an evacuation order – and a king tide could make flooding worse