Calling Jeffery Trevino's actions dishonorable, depraved and malicious, a Ramsey County District Court judge sentenced him Monday to 27 ½ years in prison for killing his wife in February, nearly twice the maximum recommended by guidelines.
Judge Leonardo Castro handed down the long sentence after finding that Trevino acted with "particular cruelty" by dumping Kira Steger's body in the Mississippi River to evade detection after he killed her in their St. Paul home. A jury convicted Trevino in October of second-degree unintentional murder and acquitted him of second-degree intentional murder, meaning they didn't believe he planned the murder.
"What was not planned during Miss Steger's death was most definitely planned upon her death," Castro said of Trevino's coverup. "They were acts of selfishness."
Steger's mother, Marcie Steger, said the sentence was "like the courthouse lifted off my shoulders," because the family had worried about the time he would receive. Prosecutors and Trevino's attorney, John Conard, argued over wildly disparate prison sentences.
Conard called for the minimum term recommended by state guidelines, about 10 ½ years, because of Trevino's military service and previously clean criminal record. Prosecutors sought 30 years, twice the maximum recommended by guidelines.
"It's a lot more than the law allows," Conard said after the sentencing.
Conard did not elaborate, and Trevino's family declined to comment.
Castro agreed with Assistant Ramsey County Attorneys Andrew R.K. Johnson and Richard Dusterhoft's assertion that there were "aggravating factors" that merited the sentence. Steger went missing after a date night with Trevino at the Mall of America on Feb. 21, setting off dozens of public searches during a bitter winter. Her body was recovered from the Mississippi River on May 8.