Hacking's Dad Says Son 'Snapped'
Mark Hacking's Lawyer Mulls Insanity Defense In Wife Slaying
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Play CBS Video Video Suicide Watch For Hacking Mark Hacking is being held on a $500,000 cash-only bond at the Salt Lake City jail, where he is under a suicide watch as the search continues for Lori Hacking's body. KUTV's Mark Koelbel reports.
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Video Mark Hacking's Hidden Side People Magazine has a report on the lengths Mark Hacking allegedly went to in order to cover up the lies surrounding his life. The magazine's Elizabeth Gleick spoke to The Early Show.
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Douglas Hacking (left) and his son, Mark Hacking (right), who is accused of murdering his wife Lori in their Salt Lake City home and dumping her body, which has yet to be found. (AP)
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Lori with Mark Hacking, the husband she thought she knew until one of his biggest lies - the claim that he was enrolled in medical school - came unraveled. (AP/Soares and Hacking Families)
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Lori's mother, Thelma Soares, was unable to speak to reporters upon being told Lori was most likely dead. But she did find time to reach out to the Hackings, saying the tragedy touches both families. (AP)
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Interactive Lori Hacking A timeline and photos detail the search for a Utah woman killed by her lying husband.
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Interactive Laci Peterson Case A timeline of the case, the charges, photos and a map of clues.
Hacking, 28, reportedly made the statement to his brothers when he was a psychiatric patient in the hospital, said defense lawyer Gil Athay.
"To me that creates a substantial issue," Athay told Salt Lake television station KUTV Thursday. "Mental illness, mental deficiency certainly will be an issue in this case."
Hacking reported his wife missing on July 19, a Monday. He said she had gone jogging and never showed up for work. Early the next morning, police found him naked outside a hotel and he was taken to the psychiatric ward.
Scott and Lance Hacking talked with their younger brother at the hospital July 24. They said he told them he had killed his wife while she was sleeping.
The brothers said they passed the information along to police through an intermediary.
For years, Mark Hacking allegedly lied to his wife, family and friends about his education and career plans. Not only wasn't he enrolled at medical school, he hadn't even graduated from the University of Utah. Yet, he and his wife were packing for the move to Chapel Hill, N.C., where she had presumed he was beginning at the medical program.
The Friday before she was reported missing, Lori Hacking, 27, left work stunned and sobbing. Her co-workers told The Associated Press she had been making some arrangements at the North Carolina medical school, and they believe an administrator was calling back to say Mark Hacking wasn't enrolled there.
"I think it's clear that this whole house of cards he had built, all this deception, had come to an end," the man's father, Douglas Hacking, told the AP. "He had been found out. His wife discovered his deception and confronted him with it, and I just think he just saw his whole world collapsing and broke down."
"He just snapped, and did something there's no explanation for. That's the only way I can envision it," he said.
Douglas and Scott Hacking are physicians, and Lance Hacking is an electronics engineer. Douglas Hacking said he believed Mark probably felt pressured by his family's achievements.
Mark Hacking was booked into the Salt Lake County Jail on Monday when officers learned that he was about to be released from the hospital. Thursday was the deadline for District Attorney David Yocom to file charges in the case, but a judge gave him an extension until Monday.
KUTV Reporter Brian Mullahy reports prosecutors will use three extra days to strengthen their case against Mark Hacking. Detectives plan to put together witness statements, get more test results from the state crime lab, and search for the ultimate piece of evidence: Lori's body, believed to be in the Salt Lake County landfill.
Police have been plowing through the area of the county landfill where garbage collected from about the time of Lori's disappearance had been deposited. The trash was compacted between loads. It's 20 feet deep over an area of two football fields and weighs about 3,000 tons.
A backhoe digs out a chunk of the trash, which is then spread out and cadaver dogs go over it. The work is done during the cooler night hours for the benefit of the dogs, who are working in difficult circumstances as they are assaulted by so many strong odors. The searches have been interrupted for days at a time to give the dogs a break, or because they are needed on other assignments around the state.
©MMIV, CBS Broadcasting Inc. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed. The Associated Press contributed to this report.
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