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Bassett guilty of murder

Second-degree verdict returned after four hours

-Messenger photo by Elijah Decious
Family and friends of victim Andrea Sokolowski await the verdict Tuesday in the court's overflow room. During the trial, all spectators were required to view via video teleconference from the basement of the Hamilton County Courthouse as a COVID-19 protocol. Jurors were seated six feet apart, taking up the entirety of the courtroom.

WEBSTER CITY — A Hamilton County jury convicted Zackery Bassett of second-degree murder Tuesday in the September 2018 killing of Andrea Sokolowski.

Deliberation started after noon on Tuesday, after 10 days at trial including two days of jury selection. The jury returned a verdict around 4 p.m.

Bassett was charged with first-degree murder after Sokolowski was found unresponsive at the couple’s Webster City apartment at 639 ½ Second St.. The jury also had the options of second-degree murder, voluntary manslaughter, involuntary manslaughter, assault causing bodily injury and assault.

First-degree murder would have required the jury to be convinced of premeditation, deliberation and specific intent, which state attorneys argued was present by the very nature of Sokolowski’s death — asphyxiation by strangulation requires several minutes of sustained, consistent pressure to cause death.

A second-degree murder verdict meant that the jury believed Bassett assaulted Sokolowski with malice aforethought the night she died, causing her death, but without the specific intent and premeditation elements required to clinch a first-degree verdict.

-Messenger photo by Elijah Decious
Andrea Sokolowski's son, Jared Foster, holds wife Jordan Foster's hand as they await the verdict. Zackery Bassett was convicted of second-degree murder in the September 2018 killing of Sokolowski.

The penalty for second-degree murder is up to 50 years in prison, at least 35 of which must be served before becoming eligible for parole.

But even without a mandatory life in prison sentence, Sokolowski’s family was satisfied with the verdict.

“Obviously, we wanted first-degree, but we’re still happy with it,” said Jared Foster, Sokolowski’s son. “It’s basically a life sentence, in a way.”

Bassett, 34, will not be eligible for parole until he is at least 67, assuming he receives credit for time served in jail awaiting trial.

But as the victim’s family reflected on justice, they acknowledged a life sentence doled out to them outside of the court’s discretion.

-Messenger photo by Elijah Decious Assistant Attorney General Nicole Leonard delivers the state's closing argument Tuesday against Zackery Bassett.

“I feel like I have a parallel life sentence in a different way,” said Aaron Sokolowski, Andrea’s ex-husband who supported her after their divorce and through her abusive relationship with Bassett.

While 35 to 50 years in prison will never be enough justice for the woman they loved, they said it will be enough to let them begin to grieve after nearly two and a half years in suspense.

“(It will mean) hopefully a lot of healing, finally crying and finally accepting,” said Denise McKnight, the victim’s daughter. “I (still) feel like she’s going to walk through the door, or call me, laughing.”

“You know,” McKnight said, as her voice broke, “I haven’t been able to let go and heal from it. She’s gone forever.”

After being forced to tear open a wound that had never healed with trial exhibits, they still remember Andrea Sokolowski for her infectious laugh, her smile and her positive attitude, no matter how difficult times were.

“She was a very unique person,” said her ex-husband. “That (kind of person) doesn’t come around very often.”

It was with those smiles and laughs, they said, through which she put on a brave face, choosing to live with the man who confirmed her worst fears. In the months preceding her death, she told friends she feared for her life with her boyfriend. In the weeks leading up to her death, friends and family told her accounts of being pinned down and muffled to the point of passing out.

After Bassett was arrested for domestic abuse assault in August 2018, the family said they enjoyed a few weeks of reprieve while she remained out of his grip. But as his threats against their family mounted, they said she eventually chose to live with him again — something the defense highlighted with her request to discontinue a no contact order.

“She, at the end, went back to protect all of us,” said Aaron Sokolowski. “She was a brave person to do that, self-sacrifice her life for everybody else.”

And after the unthinkable happened, he said that Andrea Sokolowski could have been any of them at the hands of Bassett. Knowing he would be excoriated by defense attorneys combing through his divorce decree, he showed up at trial to secure justice for her. There, defense attorneys harped on the times the victim falsely accused her ex-husband of domestic abuse assault.

“It was just what I had to do. It was for her. I had to get her justice,” Aaron Sokolowski said. “I never stopped loving her.”.

The state’s argument balanced its strength on an abundance of pinpoint petechiae hemorrhages — a sign of strangulation — and text messages between the victim and her killer the night of her death. Their closing argument underscored Bassett’s loss of control towards the end of the relationship.

Her final texts, less than two hours before she was reported unresponsive, told Bassett that she was ending the relationship.

Bassett’s sentencing hearing is scheduled for April 6.

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