Meghann M. Cuniff
The Spokesman-Review
Tags: Becky Brosnan spokane county superior court Uriah Brosnan
A Spokane man who killed his estranged wife, then impersonated her on MySpace to dupe family members into thinking she was still alive, faces about 18 years in prison when he’s sentenced next month.
Uriah J. Brosnan, 33, pleaded guilty to the Jan. 28 beating death of Becky Brosnan, 32, last week. The plea deal calls for him to serve 220 months, the high end of the standard sentence for second-degree murder, said Spokane County Deputy Prosecutor John Love.
“I’m just glad we don’t have to put the kids through a trial,” said Tina Crone, Becky Brosnan’s stepmother. Crone is caring for the Brosnans’ children, ages 6 and 11. “It’s the easy way out for him, but what else is new?”
The Brosnans were married for about 10 years and had two children before a contentious divorce sparked the custody dispute that led to Becky Brosnan’s murder, according to court documents.
Detectives found her body Feb. 9 in a debris pile behind a roofing company where Uriah Brosnan worked.
His boss told police he’d stopped by the night of the murder but Uriah Brosnan hadn’t let him come inside the business office. Police found blood smears where Brosnan had dragged his wife’s body outside, according to court documents.
For nearly two weeks, Uriah Brosnan sent text messages from his murder victim’s cell phone and updated her MySpace page to make it appear that she was alive but wanted to be left alone.
On Feb. 2, for example, Becky Brosnan’s boyfriend, Daniel Bascetta, received a text message from her cell phone that said “she was remorseful for throwing away her marriage, that she still loved him (Brosnan) and that she was leaving town,” according to court documents.
Crone grew suspicious and called police Feb. 4. It wasn’t like Becky Brosnan not to call, and she certainly wouldn’t leave her two children with Uriah Brosnan and his girlfriend, Crone said in court documents.
The Brosnans were fighting bitterly over custody and had a history of domestic violence; they had agreed to meet the night of her death to discuss the custody battle, according to court documents.
Brosnan, who pleaded guilty Dec. 23, is scheduled to be sentenced Jan. 14 in Spokane County Superior Court.
He’s been at Spokane County Jail since Feb. 10.
A compilation of daily news articles from around the United States about deaths (including both people and animals) that appear to occur in the context of a past or present intimate relationship, focusing on 2009-present. (NOTE: this blog is limited to incidents that appear in the media and are captured by our search terms. We recognize this is not an exhaustive portrayal of all deaths resulting from intimate violence.) When is society going to realize intimate violence makes victims of us all?
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