'); } -->
MANASSAS, VA. -- When it came time for Peggy Sue Hilt to make her first public comment about killing her adopted Russian daughter, she could not speak.
Before sending Hilt to prison for 25 years, Virginia Circuit Judge William D. Hamblen asked her whether she had anything to say.
Wearing an orange prison jumpsuit, her dark-blond hair at her shoulder, Hilt, who worked as a dental assistant until her arrest last year, nodded slightly and tried to talk. Long moments passed before she uttered a few slow, halting words that could scarcely be heard in the hushed courtroom:
"Saying I'm sorry doesn't even come close to the way I feel," Hilt said. She could not continue.
Hilt, 34, had pleaded guilty to second-degree murder in the death last year of her 2-year-old daughter, Nina, from a beating in their Wake Forest home. Nina died in Manassas, Va., about 36 hours after the beating. Peggy Hilt and her husband, Christopher Hilt, had driven there to visit relatives for the Fourth of July.
The case attracted a lot of attention in Russia, where Americans adopt thousands of children each year. Correspondents from the six largest Russian TV networks covered the sentencing Thursday, with camera crews camped outside the Prince William County courthouse 25 miles southwest of Washington.
Yevgeniy Khorishko, a spokesman for the Russian Embassy in Washington, said embassy officials had consulted closely with U.S. counterparts about the case and were in the courtroom for the sentencing.
"It's very good that American justice has punished the person who was charged with killing a little child," Khorishko said.
In painstaking detail, prosecutor Paul Ebert described the injuries Nina suffered:
"This child had numerous bruises and at least one laceration and internal injury," Ebert told the judge in conclusion. "It took a long time to kill this child."
Hilt's lawyer, William Stephens of Manassas, described her as a closet alcoholic who started drinking when she was 12 but never sought help for her problems.
Intense grief
Saying that Hilt felt "intense grief and stress" over her conduct, Stephens said Hilt had snapped as she tried to dress Nina in their home on the morning of July 1 last year before the family's holiday trip to Virginia.
"Every parent probably here today or hearing about this, raising children, has been at wit's end," Stephens said. "She needed help. She failed to get the help."
Peggy and Christopher Hilt had adopted a Ukrainian girl, Nataliya, in April 2001, three years before they adopted Nina. Nataliya, now 5, is living with Mr. Hilt's sister, Stephens said. Peggy and Christopher Hilt probably will have an "amiable divorce," and Mr. Hilt expects to regain custody of Nataliya, Stephens said. The father has not spoken publicly.
In sentencing Hilt, Hamblen acknowledged that she had no previous criminal record. And the judge said he considers it unlikely that Hilt would kill again were she to be freed.
"I think this crime was a confluence of circumstances that will never be repeated," Hamblen said.
Not just one blow
But the judge said that Nina had not died from a single blow, but from a series of blows over an extended period. And he criticized the passage of time between the beating in North Carolina and the mother's 911 call in Virginia.
"These factors, in my view, weigh heavily against you," Hamblen said.
Hamblen then sentenced Hilt to 35 years in prison, suspended 10 years and assigned five years of probation upon release. She could be sent back to prison to serve the additional 10 years if she commits a serious crime after being released.
Get it all with convenient home delivery of The News & Observer.
The News & Observer is pleased to be able to offer its users the opportunity to make comments and hold conversations online. However, the interactive nature of the internet makes it impracticable for our staff to monitor each and every posting.
Since The News & Observer does not control user submitted statements, we cannot promise that readers will not occasionally find offensive or inaccurate comments posted on our website. In addition, we remind anyone interested in making an online comment that responsibility for statements posted lies with the person submitting the comment, not The News and Observer.
If you find a comment offensive, clicking on the exclamation icon will flag the comment for review by the administrators, we are counting on the good judgment of all our readers to help us.