Life Sentence Urged for Man in Murder-for-Insurance Case - Los Angeles Times
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Life Sentence Urged for Man in Murder-for-Insurance Case

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A jury has recommended life imprisonment without the possibility of parole for a co-founder of a sportswear company who was convicted of killing a North Hollywood bookkeeper in a murder-for-insurance scheme.

The Los Angeles County Superior Court jury deliberated about 20 minutes before making its recommendation Tuesday in the case of Melvin Hanson.

Hanson and John Hawkins, 32, co-founders of the Just Sweats chain, were charged with murdering Ellis Greene in 1988 and later identifying him as Hanson to collect on a $1.45million life insurance policy.

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Hanson was found guilty of murder Aug. 9, but the jury deadlocked on a murder charge against Hawkins. Hawkins, however, was found guilty of conspiracy along with Hanson.

Superior Court Judge Paul G. Flynn has scheduled a Sept. 13 sentencing hearing for the two. Prosecutors had sought the death penalty.

A third defendant in the case, Glendale neurologist Richard Boggs, was found guilty of murder in 1990 and is serving a life sentence.

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The defense conceded during the trial that Hanson and Hawkins tried an insurance scam but argued that they had nothing to do with Greene’s death. They said they paid Boggs $50,000 for Greene’s body, thinking he got it from a hospital or morgue.

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