US: Chef who cooked his wife gets 15 years in jail
US: Chef who cooked his wife gets 15 years in jail
David Viens, who had confessed to the crime two years ago, now claims he was hallucinating and had made up the story about his dead wife.

Los Angeles: A chef who told police he cooked his wife's body in boiling water was sentenced on Friday in Los Angeles to 15 years to life in prison for second-degree murder. But in a new twist, he told a judge the story, which could have been a script for a horror movie, was a lie.

David Viens gave a rambling, 45-minute speech during his sentencing hearing, saying that when police questioned him two years after his wife's disappearance, he was hallucinating and therefore, made up the story about cooking his wife.

"I loved my wife. I didn't cook my wife," Viens said. "I'd like the opportunity to testify." Viens, 49, was convicted in September of killing of 39-year-old Dawn Viens in 2009. Her body was never found.

Police demolished the restaurant that Viens and his wife operated looking for evidence of a cooked body but found nothing. David Viens said the story he gave authorities came after he had been in surgery for injuries he suffered when he jumped off a cliff. Most of the bones in his body were broken and he has been in a wheel chair since then.

"I'm hallucinating the whole time I'm there," he said of the interview. "I'd been on an operating table 12 hours." Authorities said Viens leaped off the cliff after learning he was a suspect in the case.

In the recorded interrogation presented at trial, Viens said he had argued with his wife of 17 years, taped her hands and feet, duct taped her mouth and went to bed. When he awoke, he said, she was dead. He told police he then cooked her body for four days to get rid of evidence.

Superior Court Judge Rand Rubin noted that within two weeks after his wife's disappearance Viens had a new girlfriend living with him and went on with his life. Acting as his own lawyer, Viens argued that he had inadequate representation by his attorney and asked for a new trial.

Deputy District Attorney Deborah Brazil argued against the motion and said Viens received a fair trial. He responded, "I think he's afraid to face me in trial." Rubin said that the lawyer hired by Viens knew the case and his representation did not fall below the standard required by law.

He said the 122-page motion submitted by Viens was rambling and "almost nonsensical". Dawn Viens' younger sister spoke briefly saying her loss was double because she was close to Viens. "I loved him. He was like a father to me," said Dayna Papin. "He changed my life...But I feel no sympathy for him. I will not have any peace for a very long time."

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