Advertisement

We need your help now

Support from readers like you keeps The Journal open.

You are visiting us because we have something you value. Independent, unbiased news that tells the truth. Advertising revenue goes some way to support our mission, but this year it has not been enough.

If you've seen value in our reporting, please contribute what you can, so we can continue to produce accurate and meaningful journalism. For everyone who needs it.

AP/Press Association Images

Man who pushed second wife off cliff now suspected of killing first wife

Harold Henthorn’s first wife also died in an unusual accident in a remote location.

A FEDERAL JURY convicted a man of murder for pushing his wife to her death off a cliff as they hiked in Colorado’s Rocky Mountain National Park to celebrate their wedding anniversary, rejecting his claim that her fall was a tragic accident.

It took the jury about 10 hours to find Harold Henthorn, 59, guilty of first-degree murder in the death of his second wife, a wealthy Mississippi native.

PastedImage-42388 48 Hours 48 Hours

She died after plummeting about 130 feet off a cliff in a remote, rocky area where the couple had been hiking on 29 September 2012, their 12th wedding anniversary.

Henthorn told investigators that his wife paused to take a photo of the view and fell face-first over the ledge. His attorney, Craig Truman, said prosecutors failed to prove he killed her.

Prosecutors argued during a two-week trial that Henthorn carefully staged Toni Henthorn’s death to look like an accident because he stood to benefit from her $4.7 million in life insurance policies, which she didn’t know existed.

PastedImage-31009

They seized on Henthorn’s inconsistent accounts of the fatal fall and said the evidence did not match his shifting stories.

Henthorn shook his head when the judge polled the jury, and after the verdict was read, one of the jurors hugged Toni Henthorn’s mother, Yvonne Bertolet.

National Park Anniversary Death Yvonne Bertolet AP / Press Association Images AP / Press Association Images / Press Association Images

“That was very meaningful,” Bertolet said. “Believe it or not I forgive him (Henthorn) for doing it. I feel for him and his family.”

After the jury was dismissed, applause erupted in the courtroom.

“We are overjoyed with the verdict and relieved this won’t happen to any other lady,” said Barry Bertolet, Toni Henthorn’s brother. “We don’t have to worry anymore.”

National Park Anniversary Death AP / Press Association Images AP / Press Association Images / Press Association Images

Harold Henthorn, who faces a mandatory life term when he is sentenced 8 December, scouted the remote area of the popular park 75 miles north of Denver nine times before bringing his wife with him.

He was searching for the “perfect place to murder someone,” where there would be no witnesses and no chance of her surviving, prosecutor Suneeta Hazra said.

Toni Henthorn, 50, wasn’t an avid hiker, so it didn’t make sense that she would have gone willingly into such dangerous terrain, investigators testified.

A coroner said he could not determine whether she fell or was pushed, but he said he found no evidence that Harold Henthorn actually performed CPR on his wife, despite what he told dispatchers.

And park rangers said Henthorn could not explain why he had a park map with an “X” drawn at the spot where his wife fell.

Two jurors told The Associated Press that though some of the evidence was circumstantial, they were overwhelmingly convinced of Henthorn’s guilt.

Only one juror needed more time to analyse the evidence before making her decision, they said.

Juror Kim Thiessen said it was the scope of the evidence, rather than just one piece, that secured her guilty verdict.

“Some of it was circumstantial, but we were instructed to use our common sense,” she said.

Another juror, Marxy Zahn, told the AP the direct evidence supported the circumstantial evidence.

Prosecutors argued the fatal fall was reminiscent of the death of Henthorn’s first wife, Sandra Lynn Henthorn, who was crushed when a car slipped off a jack while they were changing a flat tire in 1995 — several months after their 12th wedding anniversary.

PastedImage-96635

Henthorn has not been charged in that case, but police reopened the investigation after his second wife’s death.

Details of the earlier case dominated the trial. A paramedic who responded to the 1995 accident testified that Henthorn didn’t seem upset by what had happened, and an investigator said a shoe print found on the vehicle suggested it might have been pushed.

PastedImage-96546

Although the investigation into Sandra Lynn Henthorn’s death was initially closed after a week, Truman argued that the probe had been thorough and the case only received new scrutiny after Henthorn was charged with murder.

The first wife’s death was an accident, he said, as was a 2011 incident in which a 20-foot beam fell on Toni Henthorn while the couple was working at their mountain cabin. It hit her in the head and fractured her vertebrae.

Toni Henthorn was a successful ophthalmologist from Jackson, Mississippi, who also earned money from her family’s thriving oil business.

Harold Henthorn told her he was an entrepreneur and persuaded her to move with him to the Denver suburb of Highlands Ranch. They had a daughter, now 10.

Prosecutors said Harold Henthorn made phony business cards to make it seem like he was a hard-working fundraiser for churches and nonprofits, but investigators found no evidence that he had any income from regular employment.

Watch: 48 Hours Documentary on ‘The Accidental Husband’

More: This guy’s drug company upped the price of a life-saving tablet from $13.50 to $700

Read: ‘Want to stop people breaking into your house? Turn your lights on’, says the Gardaí 

Readers like you are keeping these stories free for everyone...
A mix of advertising and supporting contributions helps keep paywalls away from valuable information like this article. Over 5,000 readers like you have already stepped up and support us with a monthly payment or a once-off donation.

Close
18 Comments
    Submit a report
    Please help us understand how this comment violates our community guidelines.
    Thank you for the feedback
    Your feedback has been sent to our team for review.
    JournalTv
    News in 60 seconds