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The Honolulu Advertiser
Updated at 2:56 p.m., Monday, September 29, 2008

LIFE SENTENCE FOR KILLING WIFE
Man gets life for stabbing wife to death

Advertiser Staff

Hawaii news photo - The Honolulu Advertiser

Roy Hartsock apologized today to his wife's children before being sentenced to life for stabbing her to death. “I loved my wife dearly and I’m sorry for the pain I put you through,” he said.

JEFF WIDENER | Honolulu Advertiser

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Hawaii news photo - The Honolulu Advertiser

A small group of women demonstrated against domestic violence today in front of Circuit Court before the sentencing of convicted murderer Roy Hartsock.

JEFF WIDENER | The Honolulu Advertiser

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Roy Hartsock was sentenced to life in prison this morning after saying that he "dearly loved" the woman he brutally killed early this year.

The sentence was handed down by Circuit Judge Richard Pollack after the children of the victim, Jenny Hartsock, tearfully and haltingly told the court how much they loved and missed their mother.

Hartsock stabbed his wife to death Jan. 9, after they had been married just six months.

He left her body lying on the ground outside their Gulick Avenue apartment with a 14-inch knife embedded in her chest.

Hartsock was on parole for burglary and assault convictions at the time of the slaying.

Testifying at the sentencing hearing were the victim's three children from a previous marriage, Dayle Dano, 23, Dazzerie Dano, 21 and Deann Dano, 14. A hanai daughter, Jasmin Doningo, 20, also testified.

The victim's sister, Tracey Uejo, spoke at length to Hartsock during the hearing, saying he had a chance to turn his life around after he met Jenny.

"You and you alone chose to throw it all away from the moment you were given the gift of knowing Jenny," Uejo said.

"You destroyed the only person willing to help you. And in the process you have destroyed a part of so many lives," she said.

Hartsock apologized to Jenny Hartsock's parents, Thomas and Janet Uejo, saying he was "deeply sorry" for what he had done.

He also apologized to her children. "I loved my wife dearly and I'm sorry for the pain I put you through," he said.

Judge Pollack called the killing a "senseless, brutal" crime and sentenced Hartsock to life in prison with the possibility of parole.

Hartsock pleaded guilty to manslaughter, which normally carries a maximum term of 20 years in prison, but agreed to an extended term of life as part of a plea deal with city prosecutors.

The Hawaii Paroling Authority will meet later to decide how much time Hartsock must serve before he is eligible for parole.