A Twin Cities mother staged a yearlong courtroom vigil more than 4,000 miles from home to honor the life of her exuberant and talented daughter, who was stabbed to death by her roommate in the Netherlands.
Donee Odegard attended every preliminary hearing, the entire trial and was there for Wednesday's sentencing of the man who killed her daughter, 21-year-old Sarah Papenheim.
"I never missed being here for my daughter," she said Thursday, one day after 24-year-old Joel Schelling learned his punishment.
A judge in Rotterdam sentenced Schelling to six years in prison followed by indefinite detention in a psychiatric facility, rejecting a longer time behind bars in the manslaughter case because the suspect can "not be fully blamed" for the death.
"I'm disgusted with the six-year sentence, then a mental institute with an undetermined length," Odegard said Thursday from the Netherlands.
Papenheim, a blues drummer from Andover who was beloved by many notable musicians around the Twin Cities, was an Erasmus University student when she was killed Dec. 12, 2018, in her Rotterdam apartment about a mile from campus.
Odegard, who lost a 20-year-old son to suicide in 2016, said she seized on the opportunity to speak during the trial and emphasized that Schelling "took the most precious thing in the world from me. Why? Just because she wouldn't talk to him. He took all her dreams and goals away, and all she did was try to be his friend."
Odegard said she is troubled that Schelling could be set free from psychiatric detention in as little as two years if "he shows [he's] all better. … So, how am I to trust a country that gives a six-year sentence to someone that stabs someone to death 27 times?"