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In brief: Take it or leaf it, when racists call, Facebook reprimand and more

Drawing lines in the leaves

It’s that time of year, when the natural cycle of trees becomes a source of controversy, lighting up Nextdoor. One neighbor’s decision to let them lie to decompose and enrich the soil—either through environmental conscientiousness or sloth—is another’s annoyance when leaves drift into a meticulously raked yard.

Some go the mowing route to speed the breakdown of leafy matter into compost, while other city dwellers, who receive a free roll of plastic bags, rake and bag and send everything off to Panorama Farms. Or they corral the leaves to the curb to be sucked up.

It’s enough of an issue that the city is conducting a survey at charlottesville.org/leaves to see what citizens think of its collection method.

Here’s what we learned from city leaf guru Marty Silman:

  • Both bagged and loose leaves go to Panorama Paydirt for composting.
  • The city distributes 25 plastic bags per resident, and anticipates passing out 350,000 this season, at a cost of $50,000.
  • The bags are not compostable nor are they recycled, but they can be returned if you don’t want them, to 305 Fourth St. NW.
  • Last year the city collected an estimated 98 tons of bagged leaves and 145 tons of loose leaves.

Quote of the week

“I didn’t respond to request for comment because I think these reporters are, a lot of them, not all of them…but the majority of these reporters, they have ill intentions and it’s not how I roll.”—Mayor Nikuyah Walker on Facebook Live in response to a Daily Progress article about councilors’ credit card spending


In brief

Racist robocalls

Idaho white supremacist group Road to Power again targeted Charlottesville residents with racist, anti-Semitic calls as jury selection for the James Fields trial began. The same group slimed the area with calls around the August 12 anniversary.

Love refiles civil suit

Sharon Love, the mother of deceased UVA lacrosse player Yeardley Love, has refiled her $30-million wrongful death lawsuit against George Huguely, her daughter’s former boyfriend who was convicted of second-degree murder in 2012 and sentenced to 23 years in prison. In June, Love dropped the case, called a nonsuit in legal terms, which gave her six months to refile.

Having his say

A memoir from City Councilor Wes Bellamy, who was vice-mayor when he called for removal of the city’s Confederate statues, will be available January 1. Monumental: It Was Never About a Statue covers the year before and after white supremacists came to town to protest removal of the statues. Says the book’s press release, “Step into his shoes and read what it felt like to be in the midst of a war for the soul of a community.”

Booted from Facebook

Former C-VILLE editor and Summer of Hate author Hawes Spencer was banned from Facebook for 24 hours November 30 for posting memes that will be presented as evidence in the murder trial of James Fields. Fields posted the images of a car driving into a crowd on Instagram three months before he did so in Charlottesville.

This is the image that got Spencer banned from Facebook for 24 hours.

Going rogue

Virginia students at the largest evangelical Christian school in the country have created an independent news website, the Liberty Torch, after Liberty University President Jerry Falwell Jr. vetoed a negative article about Donald Trump in 2016 in the school’s official newspaper, the Liberty Champion, and said the school administration must approve student articles.

New office

County officials announced last week the creation of the Office of Equity and Inclusion under director Siri Russell. The office formalizes the county’s strategy to engage in work that promotes equity, using data to assess equitable access, according to Russell. 

New leader

Legal Aid Justice Center’s director of litigation and advocacy Angela Ciolfi will take on a new role as its executive director this month. She succeeds Mary Bauer, who left recently for a job at the Southern Poverty Law Center. Ciolfi is now suing the DMV and asked a judge for an injunction to stop the automatic suspension of driver’s licenses, often for offenses that have nothing to do with driving. 

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Malice factor: Judge denies Huguely habeas petition

Just days before UVA graduation in 2010, Charlottesville—and the Washington, D.C., area—reeled with the news that fourth-year lacrosse player Yeardley Love was found dead in her apartment and her former boyfriend, George Huguely, had been charged with first-degree murder.

After a two-week jury trial in 2012, Huguely was convicted of second-degree murder and sentenced to 23 years in prison. The U.S. Supreme Court declined to hear his appeal in 2015, and Huguely filed a petition for a writ of habeas corpus in January 2016. On August 10, Judge Rick Moore denied Huguely’s petition.

“Not a surprise,” says legal expert David Heilberg. “A very small percentage of habeas petitions succeed.”

A writ of habeas corpus is a civil lawsuit that alleges the petitioner is being wrongfully imprisoned. It typically hinges on errors made during the trial and inadequate counsel—in this case by Fran Lawrence and Rhonda Quagliana, arguably two of Charlottesville’s top criminal defense lawyers.

Huguely’s petition claims his rights to a fair trial were violated when jurors were given a dictionary during deliberation to look up the definition of “malice,” an element in a second-degree murder conviction. Voluntary and involuntary manslaughter were also options for the jury.

Moore rejects the dictionary allegation from one juror because 10 others said in affidavits they had no memory of a dictionary in the jury room. “I cannot find a preponderance of evidence that the event occurred at all,” writes Moore.

During the trial, witnesses testified that Huguely had been drinking all day May 2, 2010, and was staggeringly drunk when he went over to Love’s apartment, kicked in her bedroom door, and stayed around eight minutes, according to the downstairs neighbor, who heard one thump on the floor during that time.

His petition claims defense attorneys botched determining his blood-alcohol level, which would have led the jury to determine Love’s death was from negligence or accidental.

Moore didn’t buy that argument and called it “Monday morning quarterbacking.” He writes that it is “naive to think that when a jury hears a person had 25 to 40 beers in a relatively short period, over one day, this would produce leniency. I believe that is sheer speculation, and contrary to common sense.”

The more substantial complaint from Huguely was that Quagliana emailed one of the defense expert witnesses about a prosecution witness’ testimony.

“I agree that the violation of the rule on witnesses…was deficient performance,” writes Moore. But he says he doesn’t believe that because an expert witness wasn’t allowed to testify on the effect of CPR on Love, that would have changed the outcome of the trial.

And because that was the only instance he found “where trial counsels’ actions fell below the standard,” he rejects the argument that defense screw-ups accumulated enough to warrant a new trial.

Says Moore, “As is commonly iterated, a defendant is entitled to a fair trial by competent counsel, not to a perfect trial by perfect counsel.”

Lawrence and Quagliana did not respond to a request for comment.

Heilberg says, “What it really comes down to in the end is Fran and Rhonda are great lawyers and the only ding is in talking to a witness.”

Huguely was scheduled for an evidentiary hearing August 17, which became moot after the judge made his ruling.

Huguely’s mother, Marta Murphy, says in an email, “After waiting for a ruling for over two years and then finally being granted two days for evidentiary hearings, with more than 20 witnesses subpoenaed and George’s transportation order signed, we are very disappointed with the court’s recent ruling.

“The jury clearly struggled to interpret the definition of malice and used a dictionary for a better understanding. Coupled with George’s counsel making some serious mistakes,” she writes, the jury was prevented “from hearing expert medical testimony that was critical to understanding Yeardley’s superficial injuries and ultimately what caused her death.”

Those errors kept the jury from reaching a manslaughter verdict or even an acquittal because it didn’t get to hear testimony that Love did not die from blunt force trauma and that a hemorrhage in her brain was caused by CPR, according to the petition.

Huguely believed Love was alive when he left her apartment, and during his police interview, he repeatedly expressed disbelief upon being told Love was dead, says the petition. His attorneys maintain that Love’s cause of death was accidental asphyxia stemming from her BAC of at least .16 and being found face down on her bed.

In 2012, Love’s mother, Sharon Love, filed a civil suit against Huguely, which she nonsuited in June.

In yet more court proceedings, a federal judge ruled an insurance company did not have to cover Huguely on a $6 million policy Murphy and her husband had because the policy excludes criminal acts. In that suit, Sharon Love filed a brief that said because Huguely’s BAC was an estimated .38—the level that constitutes drunk driving in Virginia is .08—he was unable to form an intent to harm her daughter.

And that, says his mother, was what they’ve contended all along—that Yeardley Love’s death was accidental.

Huguely is now held at Augusta Correctional Center. His attorney and mother did not respond to a question about whether he intends to appeal.

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In brief: The militia won’t come back, a free speech controversy and more

And stay out!

Six militia groups and their leaders named in a lawsuit aimed at preventing white supremacist and paramilitary organizations from showing their mugs around Charlottesville again have settled, agreeing they won’t engage in coordinated armed activity in any of the city’s future rallies or protests.

The latest round of defendants to bow out includes the Pennsylvania Light Foot Militia, New York Light Foot Militia, III% People’s Militia of Maryland, and their commanding officers: Christian Yingling, George Curbelo and Gary Sigler.

Militia groups were confused with the National Guard on August 12 when both groups showed up strapped with assault rifles and wearing camouflage tactical gear, but the former have maintained that they independently attended the rally to serve as a buffer between the increasingly violent alt-right and counterprotest groups.

“It became so overwhelming that the only thing we could do was pick people up off the floor,” Curbelo told C-VILLE after the suit was filed last October.

The lawsuit, which names 25 groups and individuals, was filed by Georgetown University Law Center’s Institute for Constitutional Advocacy and Protection last October on behalf of the city and several local businesses and neighborhood associations.

At this point, Jason Kessler, Elliott Kline—aka Eli Mosley—Matthew Heimbach, the Traditionalist Worker Party, Vanguard America and Redneck Revolt are the only defendants actively litigating the case, according to the law group. Others are in default or haven’t been served yet.

The League of the South, its leaders, Michael Tubbs and Spencer Borum, and the swastika-loving National Socialist Movement and its leader, Jeff Schoep, have also settled.

So with the literal neo-Nazis officially agreeing to stay away, it begs the question: Who will come to Kessler’s anniversary rally (for which the city has denied a permit) this summer?

Rotunda Bible reader silenced

UVA alum Bruce Kothmann decided to challenge the university’s new speech policies when he read from the Bible on the steps of the Rotunda in early May. University police told Kothmann that was not allowed because he needed permission a week in advance and, in any case, the Rotunda is not one of UVA’s designated free speech zones for unaffiliated people—including alums.

Sex reassignment pioneer

Dr. Milton Edgerton, a plastic surgeon who performed some of the first genital reconfigurations in the country in the 1960s at Johns Hopkins University and then in 1970 at the University of Virginia, died May 17 at age 96.

Tweet of the week

Big bucks

The city’s FY 2019 budget provides $225,000 for City Council’s own staff, including a researcher and spokesperson. A recent job listing on Indeed.com for the latter, officially called the “council outreach coordinator,” offers a starting pay between $21.36 and $31.25 per hour to “develop, implement and champion council community engagement initiatives,” among other tasks.

 ’Hoo at Windsor

UVA alum and Reddit founder Alexis Ohanian attended the nuptials of Prince Harry and Meghan Markle with his bride, Serena Williams, who’s a pal of the new Duchess of Sussex.

Ryan Kelly

Ryan’s redo

Pulitzer Prize-winning former Daily Progress photographer Ryan Kelly, who last captured Marcus Martin flying in the air August 12 after being struck by a car that plowed into a crowd on Fourth Street, took photos of Martin and Marissa Blair’s wedding for the New York Times. Pop soul musician Major sang at the event, and the purple theme was in honor of the couple’s friend, Heather Heyer.

Pole-sitter lawsuit

The Rutherford Institute has filed suit on behalf of Dr. Greg Gelburd to demand that one Mountain Valley Pipeline protester named Nutty, who’s perched on a 45-foot pole in the Jefferson National Forest, be allowed food, water and examination by the doctor, whose conscience and religious beliefs have led him to offer services to poor and disadvantaged people across the world.

A big nope

A federal appeals court has ruled that Sharon Love, the mother of Yeardley Love, will not have access to George Huguely’s family’s $6 million insurance policy in her wrongful death lawsuit against her daughter’s convicted killer. The Chartis Property Casualty Company policy has an exclusion for criminal activity.

Ew, gross

The exotic East Asian tick, aka  longhorned tick, was found on an orphaned calf in Albemarle last week, after initially being spotted on a sheep farm in New Jersey in 2017. The U.S. Department of Agriculture is still determining the significance. And in other gross news, the invasive emerald ash borer is on its way to Charlottesville and expected to kill all untreated ash trees within three years.

Quote of the Week

Nikuyah Walker. Photo by Eze Amos

“Most of the stuff I’ve been dealing with is complete nonsense.” —Mayor Nikuyah Walker on Facebook Live May 16

 

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Punitive damages: Huguely must reveal trust funds to estate of Yeardley Love

Nearly eight years after a UVA fourth-year died at the hands of her on-again off-again boyfriend a couple of weeks before graduation in 2010, lawyers representing the family of Yeardley Love were back in court February 22, and a judge granted their motion to compel George Huguely to reveal any trust funds to which he’s a beneficiary.

Jeffrey Stedman, who represents the Love family in its $30 million wrongful death lawsuit, said a jury would be less likely to award $350,000 in punitive damages, the maximum Virginia allows, if it would bankrupt Huguely, who was convicted of second-degree murder, sentenced to 23 years in prison in 2012 and has had “no real job” during that time. “Future income is not relevant unless it can be known with reasonable certainty,” said Stedman.

“We may find ourselves following Mr. Huguely around for 40 years,” he said. “His future income is relevant.”

Huguely comes from a prominent Washington, D.C., area family. His attorney, Matthew Green, argued that under Virginia law, a trust is never a current asset because the beneficiary doesn’t control it, unlike cash or a readily convertible asset. “What guaranteed income he’s going to receive in the next 12 months is a current asset,” said Green.

Another civil suit heard in Charlottesville Circuit Court in 2001 and the possible trust fund of one of four UVA fraternity brothers who brutally beat a student set a precedent that Judge Richard Moore considered in making his decision.

In that case, Richard W. Smith, the son of FedEx founder Fred Smith, was convicted along with Harrison Kerr Tigrett, the brother of the founder of the Hard Rock Cafe, Bradley Kintz and Wesley McCluney for the assault that broke the jaw of first-year Alexander Kory in November 1997, after Kory allegedly called Smith “fat ass.”

A jury awarded Kory $500,000 in damages. Smith, who sued UVA for suspending him for two years, was required to pay $200,000 in punitive damages, and his co-defendants each paid $60,000.

“The court did find the future income of one of four defendants was relevant and the jury could base punitive damages on that,” said Stedman.

Moore agreed with the decision of Judge Paul Peatross in the Kory case, and he took further issue with Huguely instructing his lawyer to provide no information to Love’s attorneys about trust funds.

“There is an obligation to respond,” Moore told Green. “As an officer of the court, you don’t let the client determine that. You tell him he’s got to respond.”

Green has until May 15 to provide information about Huguely’s trusts, which will not be made public.

The lawyers also argued Huguely’s motion that the Loves must use the same facts they filed in a Maryland insurance suit—that Yeardley’s death was accidental and unintentional. In that case, Chartis Property Casualty Company balked at paying a $6 million policy that Huguely’s mother and stepfather have because the policy excludes intentional criminal acts.

Sharon Love, Yeardley’s mother, filed a brief in the federal case that said Huguely went over to Yeardley’s apartment where they had an “emotional conversation” over their breakup, that Yeardley at one point banged her own head against her bedroom wall and that she was alive when Huguely left the apartment.

The Love family also hired Dr. Neil Blumberg, a forensic psychiatrist, who said Huguely had a .37 blood alcohol level and “was not aware of his actions,” said Green.

Stedman said the Love family “hasn’t endorsed” Blumberg’s opinion that Huguely “was so intoxicated he had some kind of blackout and didn’t know what he was doing.” He said it was up to a jury to determine whether Huguely’s actions were negligent or intentional.

In March 2017, a federal judge ruled Chartis did not have to pay on the policy, but that State Farm, which had a different definition of intent, would have to pay on a $300,000 policy.

Moore said he would announce his decision this week.

A three-week jury trial is scheduled to begin July 30, and Love has filed a motion to continue the trial again. Moore will hear that argument March 1 in Fluvanna, where he’ll be presiding that day.

After the hearing, Green said Huguely is not the same individual who appeared in that court for trial in 2012. “He’s not had a drop of alcohol since the night [Yeardley’s death] happened.” He’s handling intramural leagues at Augusta Correctional Center, where he’s incarcerated, and he is also finishing his college degree, said the attorney.

Huguely’s mother, Marta Murphy, said it was time to resolve the case. “It’s been a long time,” she said. “I’m hoping it’ll be resolved soon. It’s time. It’s time for healing and hopefully for forgiveness.”

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Split decision: Huguely insurance battle resolved

Last week a federal judge in Maryland ruled that Chartis Property Casualty Company does not have to cover convicted murderer George Huguely in a wrongful death lawsuit against him in Charlottesville. His mother and stepfather, Marta and Andrew Murphy, are insured for $6 million with that company.

In 2010, the UVA lacrosse player had a fight with Yeardley Love, a fourth-year, that left her dead.

“[Huguely], who had dated Yeardley Love ‘on and off’ for years, had been drinking alcohol heavily on May 2 and went to her house late that night,” reads the opinion filed by Judge Deborah Chasanow. “He admitted to police that he kicked a hole in her bedroom door to gain access to her room, had a physical altercation with her during an argument and left her bleeding on her bed.”

Coverage from his parents’ insurance agencies, Chartis and State Farm, has been contingent on whether Love’s death was intentional. Huguely has maintained he didn’t mean to kill her.

Though Sharon Love is suing Huguely in Charlottesville for purposely killing her daughter, she had filed a brief in the insurance battle that said it was an accident. She is seeking nearly $30 million in compensatory damages and an additional $1 million in punitive damages.

Because both insurance policies define intent differently, and Chartis’ policy explicitly says any criminal act negates coverage, it was let off the hook while State Farm is still expected to cover the convicted murderer for $300,000.

Huguely’s civil suit in Charlottesville is on track for July 2018, according to his attorney, Matt Green.

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Huguely’s wrongful death trial postponed

Charlottesville Circuit Court Judge Rick Moore has granted a motion to continue the trial date in the $30 million civil suit against former UVA student George Huguely for the wrongful death of his on- and off-again girlfriend, Yeardley Love, whom he was convicted of murdering in February 2012.

The nearly three-week trial is now set for July 30 to August 17 in 2018.

Meanwhile, two related insurance coverage cases are pending in a federal court in Maryland. One of them is between Huguely’s mother, stepfather and their primary  insurance company, Chartis Property Casualty Company, which is balking at covering the convicted murderer for $6 million. The parents also have a $300,000 policy with State Farm. Sharon Love, Yeardley’s mother, has an interest in the case because the money could be used to pay her, though the insurance policies have a criminal exclusion that may not cover Huguely if it is deemed that he intentionally killed Yeardley.

Though she is suing him for wrongful death in Charlottesville, Love filed a brief in Maryland to say that he didn’t actually mean to kill her daughter.

“Both of those insurance carriers seek a ruling that their policies will not have to cover any verdict in the Charlottesville case because they contend that Huguely’s actions were intentional,” wrote Huguely’s Richmond-based attorney in the wrongful death case, Matthew Green, in an email. “Both the estate of Yeardley Love and Huguley are parties in the Maryland cases, and they both contend that there are ample facts showing that Yeardley Love’s death was the result of an accident and not the result of intentional acts on the part of Huguley.”

A motions hearing for summary judgement filed by the insurance companies is scheduled for tomorrow at 9:30am in Maryland.

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Will George Huguely’s trial be further delayed?

Attorneys for former UVA student George Huguely and Sharon Love, the mother of the woman he was charged with killing in 2010, met November 2 in Charlottesville Circuit Court for a motions hearing in which Love’s attorney asked the court to continue her March 2017 civil trial against Huguely to a later date—though the same motion was denied 15 days prior.

Two months after Huguely’s February 2012 second-degree murder conviction in the death of Yeardley Love, his on- and off-again girlfriend, her mother filed a $30 million wrongful death civil lawsuit.

Love also has an interest in a federal case in Maryland between Huguely’s mother and stepfather and their insurance company, Chartis Property Casualty Company, which is balking at covering the convicted murderer for $6 million. That money could potentially be used to pay Love, though the company’s policy has a criminal exclusion that may not cover Huguely if it is deemed that he intentionally killed Yeardley.

In that case—and amid Love’s wrongful death suit against Huguely—she filed a brief in June stating that he didn’t mean to kill her daughter. Distraught over Yeardley breaking up with him, Love said he went to her apartment and had “an emotional conversation,” during which Yeardley banged her own head against the wall, later resulting in her death.

“Of course, money is always a poor substitute for the loss of a loved one,” Love’s attorney, Richmond-based
Jeffrey Stedman, said in court, but in this case, he said, it’s the “only remedy.” He asked Judge Richard Moore to continue Huguely’s 2017 trial until the case in Maryland can be resolved.

Love’s civil trial is anticipated to take three weeks. Moore said the next three-week slot available is in July 2018, which is eight years after Yeardley’s death.

“It’s been long enough,” rebutted attorney Matthew Green, who represents Huguely. He thanked Stedman for reminding the judge that this case is “all about the money,” and added, “at some point, this should be about justice and the truth.”

But Love’s counsel says time isn’t of the essence.

“If it’s eight years versus 87 years, I just don’t see where it’s going to make any difference,” Stedman said.

Judge Moore said he is inclined to deny the motion and would be in touch with both attorneys with his final decision by the end of the month.

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‘Fuller truth:’ Love v. Huguely hearing presents new version of Yeardley’s death

In a civil case in Maryland in June, Sharon Love filed a brief alleging George Huguely was too drunk to intentionally kill her daughter, Yeardley, in 2010.

Huguely’s lawyers said at a July 20 Charlottesville court hearing that means she can’t sue for wrongful death in Virginia. And for the first time since her son was arrested for Love’s death shortly before the two lacrosse players would have graduated from UVA six years ago, Huguely’s mother, Marta Murphy, spoke out on the “terrible tragedy.”

Although Huguely was convicted of second-degree murder, he has always maintained he did nothing that would have resulted in Yeardley’s death, and even in his police interrogation on May 3, 2010, the morning she was found unresponsive in her bedroom, Huguely appeared genuinely shocked and disbelieving when police told him she was dead.

After his conviction in 2012, Sharon Love and her daughter Lexie Love filed a more than $30 million wrongful death suit, which has been on hold as Huguely’s appeal wended its way up to the U.S. Supreme Court, which refused to hear the case last year.

Murphy’s insurance company, Chartis Property Casualty Company, is balking at covering Huguely under her and his stepfather’s policies for $6 million because the policies exclude criminal acts and because he’s refused to be interrogated by Chartis representatives. The company has sued in federal court in Maryland.

In that case, Sharon Love’s brief stated that Huguely, distraught over Yeardley breaking up with him, went over to talk to her, kicked in her bedroom door and had “an emotional conversation” with her, during which at one point Love banged her own head against the wall. Huguely denied striking her, although he did tell police they had “wrestled” and he noticed Love’s nose was bleeding.

Love was “alive and fine” when he left her apartment after “tossing” her onto the bed, her mother’s brief says.

The brief also cites experts who tallied Huguely’s alcohol consumption and estimate that over a 30-hour period, Huguely quaffed approximately 45 drinks and had a blood alcohol level of .38, which rendered him unable to form intent to harm Love and put him in a state of “alcoholic blackout.”

And that, say Huguely’s attorneys, was his position all along—that it was a “terrible accident” and Huguely did not intend to kill Love that night. “We’re happy the brief filed by Sharon Love in the district court in Maryland supports the same argument—that George didn’t intend to do it,” said Matthew Green. “We believe George and Yeardley were having a discussion on Yeardley’s bed and they fell,” which would account for the loud crash that sounded like a bookcase toppling, the downstairs neighbor testified at the murder trial she heard.

Back in Charlottesville Circuit Court, where Huguely was convicted after a two-week jury trial that drew national media attention, Sharon Love’s attorney, Irv Cantor, asked to extend a stay and continue the March 2017 trial, pending a decision in the Maryland case.

Green argued that while Huguely has accepted responsibility for negligence, four of five counts in Love’s wrongful death lawsuit should be dropped because her brief in Maryland amounted to judicial estoppel.

That means “you can’t have it both ways,” says legal expert David Heilberg. “Either it was intentional or unintentional. Love can’t claim it was unintentional to collect the insurance.”

Love was merely opposing a summary judgment motion and “what she said was they are issues for a jury to decide,” said Cantor.

Judge Rick Moore agreed to a stay, but not to push back the trial until another hearing October 18.

So far, 17 people have been deposed in the civil suit, and Green promised a “fuller truth” to what happened the night Yeardley Love died.

“We have done an incredible amount of work on the civil litigation,” he said. “We have tools that don’t exist in the criminal case, specifically the ability to take a deposition. We’re going to depose everyone. I think we’re going to be able to tell a full story when we get to trial.”

Heilberg notes that in a criminal trial, a conviction requires proof beyond a reasonable doubt, while a civil trial merely requires a preponderance of evidence, and “one grain of sand” can tip the scales of justice.

Huguely also has filed a habeas petition, which is a civil proceeding in which he alleged he’s being wrongfully imprisoned because he received ineffective counsel during his trial.

His mother described the “profound loss” of both Love and her son. “It’s been six long years since the terrible tragedy of May 3,” she said. “It’s hard to describe in words the loss of Yeardley’s life, whom we all loved.

Sharon Love, the mother of slain UVA lacrosse player Yeardley Love, is suing George Huguely for more than $30 million. Photo UPI/Kevin Dietsch
Sharon Love is suing George Huguely for more than $30 million for the wrongful death of her daughter. UPI/Kevin Dietsch

“I also have incredible pain for my son’s incarceration, and in spite of his second-degree conviction, Mrs. Love is now admitting and acknowledging it was an accident.”

Murphy said she hoped Love’s “admission of what actually happened that night” would bring peace to all those affected, “including the Love family.”

Correction 8/2/16: The original caption for Murphy had the wrong length of time since Huguely was convicted.