It was a deal that no one — not the family of Toni Bachman, not the prosecutor, not the judge — wanted. But, as Ramsey District Judge Salvador Rosas acknowledged, it ensured that Norman A. Bachman Jr. would pay a price for murdering and dismembering his wife more than 18 years ago in White Bear Township.
"You're a terrible person. … You deserve more [time] than what I'm going to give you here today," Rosas said before sentencing the Anoka man to more than 13 years behind bars.
It was a deal meant to provide some closure to a family that waited nearly two decades for answers, said Assistant Ramsey County Attorney Andrew Johnson.
"There are some difficult realities that you have to face," Johnson said, noting authorities had no body, no murder weapon and no witnesses to the killing beyond Bachman's confession. "Sometimes you have to come to an agreement in the middle."
Rosas told Bachman, 53, that he could shave more than three years — 40 months — off his sentence if he helps authorities find the body of his wife. He has helped authorities search several times since pleading guilty in October to first-degree manslaughter, but they've been unable to find her remains.
"We don't know if he's not remembering correctly," Johnson said.
To Toni Bachman's family, Friday's sentencing helped, but felt incomplete. The sentence is too short, they said. Bachman's words are too remorseless for there to be much satisfaction, said Tim Reineccius, Toni's brother.
"You never get 100 percent closure in a situation like this," he said. "It's reassuring that he's locked up, he can't hurt anyone else. I would like to see him spend the rest of his life in prison."