A
Wisconsin man was sentenced Wednesday to 40 years in prison in the fatal
shooting and dismemberment of a Minnesota man.
Kou
Thao, 28, of Wausau, pleaded no contest in September to second-degree
intentional homicide in the April 2013 death of 58-year-old Tong Pao Hang, of
St. Paul, Minnesota.
Thao
was sentenced in Marathon County Circuit Court. The Wausau Daily Herald Media
reported (http://wdhne.ws/1BI8H6S ) his sentence also includes 20 years of
extended supervision after his release.
Thao,
who was also convicted of hiding a corpse and possession of a firearm by a
felon, was accused of shooting and dismembering Hang, and taking Hang's severed
head to Milwaukee in the trunk of his car in the spring of 2013. Other body
parts were found in the basement of a Milwaukee home.
A
motive in the killing was unclear. Prosecutors have said it appeared the two
men met just days before the shooting.
A
Marathon County judge ruled last year that Thao was mentally capable of
assisting with his own defense.
Thao's
attorney, Steven Kohn, had argued his client deserved less than the maximum
sentence of 80 years in the prison system.
"I
don't think this is a young man who is a worst-case offender and for whom we have
no hope," Kohn said.
At
Wednesday's hearing, Hang's son, Shoua Neng Hang, told Judge Michael Moran that
his father was a loving man who was devoted to his family and took his children
fishing and camping.
"Losing
and saying goodbye to my father is one of the most difficult things I have gone
through," Hang said. "If tears could build a stairway to heaven, I
would walk right up there and bring my dad home again."
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