February 11, 2009 7:52 PM
- Text
Scholarship Memorial For Lori
(AP)
The mother of Lori Hacking presented $12,500 in scholarship money in her name to the University of Utah.
Thelma Soares gave the money to the David Eccles School of Business from the Lori Hacking Memorial Fund, established by Hacking's employer, Wells Fargo. The Lori Kay Soares Hacking Memorial Scholarship will be awarded annually.
Hacking's husband, Mark, is accused of shooting his 27-year-old wife in the head while she slept July 19, and then dumping her body in a trash bin, according to an alleged confession to his brothers. He remains jailed on $1 million cash-only bond. A preliminary hearing is set Sept. 23.
Detectives and cadaver dogs are still searching the Salt Lake City dump, hoping to find both Lori Hacking's body and the .22-caliber firearm police say was the murder weapon.
Lori Hacking graduated with a bachelor's degree in management from the business school and had been accepted to the school's master's program.
"I am sure Lori is looking down upon this happy occasion with her dazzling smile because she knows her scholarship will now help those in need gain an education and that was very important to Lori," Soares said, fighting back tears.
"Just Wednesday, I received a letter with a one dollar bill and one dime inside of it from a child who wanted to help. I wept when I opened that envelope."
The Lori Kay Soares Hacking Memorial Scholarship will be awarded annually to a junior student who is in good standing at the University of Utah with a minimum 3.0 grade point average.
Thelma Soares gave the money to the David Eccles School of Business from the Lori Hacking Memorial Fund, established by Hacking's employer, Wells Fargo. The Lori Kay Soares Hacking Memorial Scholarship will be awarded annually.
Hacking's husband, Mark, is accused of shooting his 27-year-old wife in the head while she slept July 19, and then dumping her body in a trash bin, according to an alleged confession to his brothers. He remains jailed on $1 million cash-only bond. A preliminary hearing is set Sept. 23.
Detectives and cadaver dogs are still searching the Salt Lake City dump, hoping to find both Lori Hacking's body and the .22-caliber firearm police say was the murder weapon.
Lori Hacking graduated with a bachelor's degree in management from the business school and had been accepted to the school's master's program.
"I am sure Lori is looking down upon this happy occasion with her dazzling smile because she knows her scholarship will now help those in need gain an education and that was very important to Lori," Soares said, fighting back tears.
"Just Wednesday, I received a letter with a one dollar bill and one dime inside of it from a child who wanted to help. I wept when I opened that envelope."
The Lori Kay Soares Hacking Memorial Scholarship will be awarded annually to a junior student who is in good standing at the University of Utah with a minimum 3.0 grade point average.
Latest Now in National
- Autopsy on Whitney Houston to begin Sunday
- Experts: Stanford's trial not won with 1 witness
- Drillers cut natural gas production as prices drop
- Man charged in plot to kill Utah governor
- Nature: Bobcats riding out the snow
- US seeks to mine social media to predict future
- RI player wins $336 million Powerball jackpot
- How the revolution became digitized
- Celebs mourn Whitney Houston at Clive Davis event
- The nation's weather
- Whitney Houston fans pay emotional tribute
- Hudson to honor Houston at Grammys
- Man to face Alabama trial in wife's diving death
- Whitney Houston's final performance
- Remembering Whitney Houston 1963-2012
- Screenplay for Murder
- Extra: Jimmy Siokos on Mark Twitchell
Latest CBS News Headlines
on Facebook Most Discussed Stories
on CBS News
- Clarissa Ward on reporting from Syria
- Whitney Houston's death overshadows Grammys
- Experts: Stanford's trial not won with 1 witness
- RI city takes on Brown U. in town-gown money clash
on Facebook Most Discussed Stories
on CBS News






