A Setback For "Milkshake Murder" Convict
No New Trial For American Woman Convicted Of Killing Her Husband In Hong Kong
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American Nancy Kissel walks out of Hong Kong's High Court in this Aug. 2, 2005 file photo. Kissel, serving a life term in Hong Kong will return to court Monday, April 14, 2008 to appeal her sentence for bashing her banker husband to death after spiking his milkshake with sedatives four and a half years ago. (AP Photo)
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Play CBS Video Video Journalist On Kissel Murder Hong Kong-based journalist Albert Wong talks to Erin Moriarty about the Robert Kissel murder case and how it affected the area's expatriate community.
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Video '48' Examines Kissel Murders The Kissel brothers, Andrew and Robert, were ambitious businessmen who enjoyed extravagant lifestyles. Both were murdered - but in different countries. Erin Moriarty reports on this peculiar story.
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Interactive Crime Beat Statistics and specifics on crime in America.
Nancy Kissel was convicted in 2005 of giving her husband a milkshake laced with sedatives before fatally beating the wealthy banker on the head with a metal ornament during an argument in 2003.
Kissel said she did it in self-defense. Prosecutors argued she planned the attack in the couple's luxury apartment.
The three-judge court rejected Kissel's request, but the 44-year-old Minnesota native's attorney said he would ask the Court of Final Appeal to hear her case.
The case made headlines worldwide because of allegations of drug abuse, kinky sex and adultery in the wealthy world of expats in this Asian financial center.
Defense attorney Simon Clarke said he was "very disappointed" with Monday's decision, but added that he expected "a better hearing at the Court of Final Appeal."
Kissel said her 40-year-old husband, Robert, an investment banker for Merrill Lynch, was an erratic whiskey-swilling workaholic who also snorted cocaine and forced her to have sex.
She testified that she killed him as he was threatening her with a baseball bat in a quarrel.
During the appeal hearings, Kissel's defense lawyer said the woman suffered an abnormality of mind that substantially impaired her self-control.
But prosecutors argued that Kissel was a cold-blooded, scheming woman who plotted to kill her husband.
They said Robert Kissel of New York had been angry about his wife's affair with a repairman who worked on the couple's vacation home in Vermont. He had planned to seek a divorce just before she killed him, they said.
Robert Kissel's estate was worth $18 million in life insurance, stocks and properties, prosecutors said.
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- I guess this means she shouldn''t have cheated on, and murdered her husband.
Too bad she didn''t figure it out before she hatched her evil plot! - Reply to this comment




