Attorney Terri Melcher gave the closing argument of her life Friday. But she wasn't wrapping up a trial.
The victim of a stabbing attack in her Fridley office that almost killed her in 2010, she gracefully delivered a 15-minute impact statement that left many of her relatives and legal colleagues in an Anoka courtroom in tears.
Her attacker, Sheikh Nyane — who would receive a nearly 17-year sentence — apologized to Melcher, asking for forgiveness for his "evil" acts and talking of a lifelong struggle with mental illness and the pain of losing his young son in a custody battle. His ex-wife had been represented by Melcher, who hadn't heard a frantic voice mail saying Nyane planned to kill somebody a minute before he entered her office and stabbed her 25 times.
"As the stabbing continued, I told myself I was too young to die," Melcher said during her impact statement. "But I was hoping my husband knew where I put my life insurance policy."
Anoka County Judge Thomas Fitzpatrick sentenced Nyane to 200 months in prison and told him there was no justification for what he did. He acknowledged that Nyane's depression played a role in his violent behavior, describing it as a vicious and brutal act on an innocent and defenseless victim just doing her job.
"The only reason you aren't going to prison for life is that the knife broke and she survived," he said.
He was referring to the knife's tip, which snapped off in Melcher's skull after the first blow. That didn't stop him, Melcher said, as he continued to stab her face and upper body and cut her throat.
She needed 137 stitches and hours of surgery. While Melcher was on the operating table, a telephone was held to her ear for her to give a statement to police. She was later told it was done at that time because they believed she was going to die, she told the courtroom.