Mich. woman, 75, convicted of murdering grandson

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PONTIAC, Mich. (AP) — A suburban Detroit grandmother was convicted Tuesday of second-degree murder for killing her teenage grandson last spring, as jurors rejected her claim that she shot him six times in self-defense.

Sandra Layne, 75, cried quietly when she heard the verdict, which was delivered during the first full day of jury deliberations. She was also convicted of using a firearm during a felony and likely faces at least 14 years in prison.

Defense attorney Jerome Sabbota said after the hearing that Layne was "devastated" by the verdict. But Jonathan Hoffman's mother, Jennifer Hoffman, said her mother was a "monster" who deserves to go to prison.

"I'm glad she's put away and can't do harm to anyone else," Jennifer Hoffman said outside court. "He was a great kid and didn't deserve this."

As Layne was being led out of court, some family members sitting with her 87-year-old husband waved in a show of support, but her view was blocked by a deputy.

Layne fired 10 shots at her 17-year-old grandson, striking him six times over a six-minute span during an argument at their West Bloomfield Township home last May. She never disputed that she killed her grandson, but she testified that she did so because he had hit her and she feared for her safety.

The Oakland County jury had a choice of first-degree murder or lesser charges, or it could have acquitted her based on her argument of self-defense.

The evidence included a recording of Hoffman's desperate call to 911 in which he pleads for help, even as more shots are fired.

"My grandma shot me. I'm going to die. Help. I got shot again," he told the dispatcher as he gasped for air.

Jurors declined to comment following the verdict, but they told the prosecutor and Layne's attorneys during a private meeting that the 911 call was critical to their decision, according to one of the prosecutors, Paul Walton.

"They said they played it over and over and over again" in the jury room, Walton said. "One of the big things they said is when you hear the shots on the (call) there's no struggle."

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