FULL TEXT: A woman convicted of killing her fifth husband
was sentenced to life in prison by a judge who compared her with a poisonous
fish that “consumes all who come in contact with it.”
Della Dante Sutorius, who had allegedly threatened to kill
several of her previous husbands, was sentenced Monday for the Feb. 18 shooting
death of Dr. Darryl J. Sutorius. Prosecutors described her as a black widow
spider who shot her husband for his $900,000 in assets.
But Judge Richard Niehaus said she reminded him of a
lionfish he saw while scuba diving, beautiful but with fins that are as sharp
as needles and poisonous.
“It consumes all who come in contact with it. That creature
is you,” he told Della Sutorius.
She got the maximum sentence for aggravated murder: life in
prison with no chance of parole for 20 years. She also got three years for
using a gun during a crime and 11/2 years for drug possession. A tin of cocaine
had been found in her bedroom.
Prosecutors painted Della Sutorius as an insecure,
manipulative, high school dropout who married for money. She met the
55-year-old heart surgeon through a dating service and had been married to him
for 11 months when she shot him in the head as he sat on a couch in their home.
Dr. Sutorius had been planning to divorce his wife. The
defense said he had been depressed and suggested his death was a suicide.
Prosecutors said the angle of the wound and the distance the gun was held from
the head proved otherwise.
Several of Della Sutorius’ former husbands said she had
threatened to kill them. In 1990, shortly after she divorced husband No. 3, she
was convicted of threatening a boyfriend with a gun.
Della Sutorius declined to comment and said nothing in
court. Her lawyer said she will appeal.
[“‘Black Widow’ Sentenced For Killing No. 5,” AP, June 26
1996]
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CHRONOLOGY
Aug. 8, 1950 – Della Faye Hall born August 8, 1950, Auxier, KY.
1968? – Joseph Hoeffer (18), husband #1; daughter.
1972 – files for divorce from Hoeffer. The daughter was
eventually put into foster care.
1974 to 1979 – married
James Beyer (“Ralph”?), husband #2.
1979 – leaves
second husband, Beyer, returns to Hoeffer.
1981 – unnamed
boyfriend; Della attempts to hire her sister’s boyfriend to kill him. Multipole
attempts to murder him through electrocution, kerosene lantern burning.
1982 – Northern
Kentucky boyfriend; house burns down.
1990 – marries Grant
Bassett, husband #3; Dallas; Della told him, “Do
you know that I could kill you if I wanted and this world would never miss a beat?
They would never miss you,” Mr. Bassett told prosecutors. Della also had Mr.
Barrett arrested several times; she once told police that he had raped her.
1990 – moves back
to Cincinnati. Dates wealthy and well-known men. Uses name “Dante.”
1991 – Jeff
Freeman, stockbroker boyfriend; pretends
to be pregnant; convicted of menacing and threatening him with a gun at his
office.
1992-1994– David Britteon (Brennan, erroneously) (29), husband #4. Threatens to murder
him multiple times.
1994 – Uses false
domestic violence accusation to loot Britteon while in jail.
Nov. 1994 – Della meets Dr. Darryl Sutorius through a dating service.
Feb. 19, 1996 –
Dr. Darryl Sutorius, husband #5, found
dead shot in back of the head. Symmes Creek, Cincinnati.
Feb. 19, 1996 – Dr.
Darryl Sutorius, found dead shot in back of the head. Symmes Creek,
Cincinnati.
Jun. 7, 1996 –
convicted of Daryll Sutorious murder.
Nov. 20, 2010 – Diana
(60) dies; Marysville, Union County, Ohio
Della Sutorious’ weapons: arson, knives, guns, dating agency,
false rape accusation, false pregnancy claim, false domestic violence
accusation, paternity fraud, automobile sabotage.
***
EXCERPTS from
Anna Magma, Female Terror: Scary Woman, Modern Crimes, Virgin Books,
2002, 37-41. --
“Sentencing her
in June 1996 the Ohio judge Richard Neihaus opined that she was beyond
rehabilitation. He compared the small 46-year old woman to a lionfish. ‘The
outward appearance of the creature completely belies its deadly, poisonous
aggressive nature. The lionfish attracts its prey through its appearance and
then consumes all that comes close to it. That creature is you.’” [p. 37]
One sister
recalled that when they were children, growing up in Cincinnati, Della, aged
seven, claimed she had murdered a dog. ‘Do you like what I did to it? ‘I saved
the best part for you”‘ She said. ‘I saved the best part for you. You get to do
the eyeballs.’ She then poked at the dead animal’s sockets with a sick.” [38]
There were five
husbands before Dante netted Darryl Sutorius through a dating agency in Ohio.
Five husbands whose bank accounts had been cleaned out, who had been stalked
and followed and threatened. A stock trick, on rejection, was to inform the man
that she was pregnant.
‘If I marry her
she will have an abortion,’ her fifth husband David Brennan told a friend: ‘If
not she says she will come after me for child support for eighteen years.’ He
capitulated and married her.
One of her many
lovers woke up to find his bed on fire. Della denied it, of course. Later
somebody broke into his apartment and smashed it up. Everything was broken.
This fish died. Everything. Another, whose house burned to the ground, strongly
suspected that Della had committed arson. She managed to wheedle her way back
into his bed. He woke up the next morning to find the only possession that had
not been burned in the fire had been stolen by her – his wallet and his cash.
The very last things. She denied it, of course; told him she was pregnant and
he would have to marry her.
Another man, in
California, was threatened with a knife and was sure that Della was responsible
for the fact that motor oil had been poured into his brake fluid, causing his
car to lose control.
Jeff Freeman, a
stockbroker, was made of sterner stuff. After a disastrous holiday where he
grew tired of her cutesy voice, her snobbish airs and endless grooming and
whining, he tried to extricate himself from their relationship. She pretended
she was pregnant and then pulled a gun on him. For which she received a
conviction. [39]
***
EXCERPTS from Kristen Delguzzi, “The strange life of Della
Sutorious,” The Cincinnati Enquirer (Oh.), Jun. 23, 1996, p. 1. --
Soon after the demise of her second marriage, Della began
exhibiting a violent streak.
Near the end of one relationship 15 years ago, Della tried
to hire her sister’s boyfriend to kill her own boyfriend, prosecutors said. Her
sister’s boyfriend declined.
After an argument with her same boyfriend, Della covered the
bathroom floor with water and plugged in an appliance, hoping to electrocute
him. She then used a kerosene lamp to set his backside on fire, prosecutors
said.
Carla Magevney, Della’s half-sister, remembers the night the
man awoke in flames. He called Della’s mother, who rushed to the apartment on
Queen City Avenue.
“There was an iron that was plugged in in the toilet,”
recalled Mrs. Magevney, who accompanied her mother. “She wanted him to reach in
and electrocute himself.”
Della never was charged, and the man was not seriously
injured.
. . .
With her dark hair dyed blonde, at least one of the two face
lifts already behind her and claims that she was a UCLA graduate, Della quickly
met her third husband, Grand Bassett, a photographer.
Theirs was the first marriage, prosecutors say, in which
Della was violent and threatening. It was also the only time Della spent most
of her married life outside Cincinnati; she and Mr. Bassett lived in Dallas,
where he worked.
“She was instantly jealous,” Mr. Logano said. “She was always suspicious.”
She began hiding knives around their house, burying them in
couch cushions and sliding them in couch cushions and sliding them between pieces
of stereo equipment.
One time, at a McDonald’s restaurant in Dallas, Della told
her husband, “Do you know that I could kill you if I wanted and this world
would never miss a beat? They would never miss you,” Mr. Bassett told
prosecutors.
Della also had Mr. Barrett arrested several times; she once told
police that he had raped her.
***
Wikipedia: Della Faye
Hall Hoeffer Beyer Bassett Britteon Sutorius (born Della Faye Hall,
August 8, 1950) is an American woman convicted of murdering her husband in
1996.
~Murder~
Dr. Darryl
Sutorius was found dead in the basement of the house he shared with his wife on
February 19, 1996. Though it was clear that a gunshot to the head had been the
cause of death, authorities were initially unsure whether his death was
homicide or suicide. Sutorius’s wife, Della, was arrested the same day when
investigating police found a supply of cocaine. Though released on bail the next
day, Mrs. Sutorius was re-arrested on February 27 when it was determined that
she had purchased the weapon that had killed her husband and gunshot residue
tests and autopsy results indicated that she had been the one who fired the
weapon on the day of Sutorius’s death. This time the charge was aggravated
murder with prior calculation.
~Investigation and trial~
Investigation
into the background of Della Sutorius showed that the death of Sutorius, her
fifth husband, was not the first time Della Sutorius had been associated with
violence. Sutorius’s third husband alleged that she had repeatedly threatened
to kill him during their marriage; after the couple divorced, she was charged
with threatening another man, this time a boyfriend, with a gun. One husband
had found knives hidden around the house he shared with her and had been
surprised when she told him she “could kill you,” while her fourth husband told
investigators that she was mentally abusive and he feared her to the point of
hiding the bullets to his gun to prevent her from being able to use them.
Hamilton County, Ohio prosecutor Joe Deters theorized that Della Sutorius had “a
serious problem with rejection” after colleagues of her husband reported that
shortly before his death, Darryl Sutorius had been considering filing for
divorce. According to her sister Donna Hall, Sutorius’s approach to men had
long been colored by monetary gain: “She said you find a wealthy man and, when
they die, you get their money.”
Sutorius declined
to take the stand in her own defense at her trial. Though her lawyers argued
that police had failed to prove that Darryl Sutorius’s death was anything but
suicide and that his wife’s statements to police had not been preceded by a
Miranda warning, she was convicted on June 7, 1996, with the jury deliberating
for fewer than five hours before finding her guilty of aggravated murder. Later
the same month, she was sentenced to more than twenty years in prison: twenty
years for the murder, three because a gun was used in the crime, and eighteen
months on drug charges.
~ After conviction ~
Della Sutorius
appealed her conviction in the spring of 1997, claiming that the trial jury
having been allowed to hear hearsay evidence of statements her dead husband had
made and that prosecutors had made improper comments to the jury. The appeal
was declined in June of the same year and Sutorius returned to serving her
sentence at the Ohio Reformatory for Women. She died there on November 20,
2010.
In order to
defray the costs of prosecuting Sutorius, the Hamilton County Sheriff’s
department seized and auctioned off Sutorius’s 11-piece jewelry collection.
Despite the coverage the press devoted to the auction, bidders failed to meet
the minimum necessary total for the pieces to sell separately and the lot was
sold for a $5,100 lump sum.
~ In media ~
Della Sutorius’s
dramatic history with her husbands and the public perception of her as a being “black
widow” attracted high levels of coverage from the press; her lawyer,
ex-husbands, and ex-boyfriends were all reportedly approached by talk show
hosts and news broadcasts such as Geraldo Rivera and Hard Copy. A spokeswoman
for the Sally Jessy Raphael talk show Sally, which also pursued the story,
explained that the case was “highly dramatic” and would be of appeal to daytime
television watchers. Despite jury selection being slowed down by
already-widespread news coverage of the case, CourtTV was permitted to televise
coverage of the May 1996 trial. A 2010 episode of Dateline NBC covered the case
in detail, interviewing Sutorius’s family and friends as well as people who had
been involved in her legal cases.
Crime reporter
Aphrodite Jones covered Sutorius’s case in her 2011 book Della’s Web, a
2012 segment of the true-crime series Deadly Women also featured the case.
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For links to other cases of woman who murdered 2 or more husbands (or paramours), see Black Widow Serial Killers.
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[839-1/3/2021]
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I recently study the case. I covered the forensic aspect of the case. The case seems to be a suicide but forensic analysis states why it was not a suicide by homicide by his second wife Della Dante Sutorius. You can check the full case study of Second Shot at love at https://forensicreader.com/second-shot-at-love-case-study/.
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