Thursday,  April 3, 2014 • Vol. 16--No. 259 • 18 of 33

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University where they'll take field trips and get hands on demonstrations from chiropractic care to the cadaver lab.
• Geology Rocks! will take kids camping around the Black Hills in June to study ancient rock layers and fossils.
• The website is www.sd.gov/careercamps .

Jury to weigh death penalty in carjack killing
DIRK LAMMERS, Associated Press

SIOUX FALLS, S.D. (AP) -- A man who could face the death penalty for killing a South Dakota hospice nurse as part of a plan to assassinate President Barack Obama has a history of mental illness and his life should be spared, his attorney argued Wednesday.
• James McVay, 43, pleaded guilty but mentally ill to murder for the 2011 stabbing of 75-year-old Maybelle Schein. McVay said he killed Schein and stole her car as part of his plot to drive to Washington and kill the president.
• Jurors are deciding whether McVay should die by lethal injection or face life in prison without parole.
• Richard Dieter, executive director of the Death Penalty Information Center, said the death penalty is traditionally reserved for the worst of the worst, and it's rare for a state to seek the punishment of death after finding someone guilty but mentally ill.
• "I just don't know of any cases in which you have (such) a verdict, and then the state still seeks the death penalty," he said.
• For a jury to consider giving McVay a death sentence, prosecutors must prove one of two aggravating circumstances. One would be that the offense was outrageously or wantonly vile, horrible, or inhuman in that it involved torture, depravity of mind, or an aggravated battery to the victim.
• Prosecutor Aaron McGowan said McVay stabbed Schein nine times, with the final blow cutting her vocal cords and carotid artery, causing her to bleed to death within 16 seconds.
• "She cried for help, yelled for help," McGowan told jurors.
• Amber Eggert, McVay's public defender, said McVay wasn't looking to make Schein suffer.
• "It wasn't something he was trying to draw out," Eggert said.
• For the other aggravating circumstance, the defendant must have committed the offense for his or her own benefit or the benefit of another, for the purpose of receiving money or any other thing of monetary value. McGowan said McVay killed Schein to steal her car.

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