A Cumberland County judge sentenced Thomas O'Donnell to life in prison after a jury found him guilty of murder, concluding a lengthy trial that prosecutors said included forensic evidence and testimony from relatives of the victim.
The judge described the killing as "one of the most coldblooded, heinous acts" he had seen and recounted painful victim-impact statements from family members, saying the defendant’s conduct had a "terrible impact on that family" and the wider community. The judge noted forensic evidence presented at trial, including cell-phone tracking and DNA placements, and said the record and jury verdict supported the sentence.
Prosecutors told the court they had pursued the case through trial; defense counsel had mounted a challenge to aspects of the forensic evidence, the judge said. The judge reviewed the procedural protections the defendant had received at trial, including the opportunity to present expert witnesses and cross-examine state witnesses, and then imposed life in the custody of the Department of Corrections.
The court did not impose the death penalty; the judge said, by contrast, that a life term was "most deserved" given the facts the jury found. No further sentencing proceedings were recorded for this case during the session. The court scheduled no additional proceedings on the record at the time of sentencing.
The matter was heard in open court before the presiding judge of the Cumberland County Circuit Court; the transcript records the court's admonitions about the evidence and the victim statements that informed the sentence. The case record is docketed under indictment 22CR00103.