The widow of Wayzata police officer Bill Mathews on Friday faced the woman who took her husband's life last fall on Hwy. 12 and gave a dramatic description of the toll his death has taken on her family.
Speaking in a crowded Hennepin County courtroom, Shawn Mathews said that she and her family are now serving a "life sentence without Bill."
Then she paused for 12 seconds, the amount of time authorities say that Beth I. Freeman, 54, had to avoid hitting Mathews.
Her statement and one by her young son highlighted a tearful sentencing of Freeman for criminal vehicular homicide. Under the plea agreement, Freeman will serve eight years, two-thirds of it in prison and the last third on probation, as long as she commits no violations, said Judge Tamara Garcia.
Freeman, who had cocaine in her system at the time of the accident, was driving a Nissan Murano without a valid driver's license last Sept. 8 when she struck Mathews, who was clearing debris on Hwy. 12.
In graphic detail, Shawn Mathews described the severe injuries her husband suffered, including many broken bones, damaged organs and a severed spinal cord.
Their son, Wyatt, who was 7 at the time of the accident, told the court, "That day changed my life forever. I can never play with my dad again." He said it "makes me feel sad and lonely."
The small courtroom was packed with about 50 people, including five uniformed Wayzata police officers who sat in the jury box.