Judge's slain mother remembered at funeral
Police say DNA proves man comitted the murders
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Search widens for missing Utah mom Dec. 19: Authorities served a court order asking local television stations for their raw footage of Josh Powell, who police call a “person of interest,” in the disappearance of his wife, Susan. NBC’s Miguel Almaguer reports, then NBC’s Lester Holt sits down with Kiirsi Hellewell, a friend of Susan Powell. |
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Profile of a suspected killer March 12: The man believed responsible for the deaths of a Chicago judge’s husband and mother was consumed by rage and paranoia, NBC’s Kevin Tibbles reports. Nightly News |
LITTLETON, Colo. - Donna Humphrey, the slain mother of a federal judge, was remembered at a funeral service Saturday as a bright and inquisitive woman who was active in her church and gave her time to charity.
Judge Joan Humphrey Lefkow held back tears as she entered St. James Presbyterian church outside Denver and walked past large photographs of her mother and her husband, Michael, who were killed last month in an apparent attempt to get even with Lefkow.
Although the man apparently responsible for the slayings has committed suicide, at least a dozen U.S. marshals were stationed around the church and a mobile police command center had been set up as precautions.
Humphrey and Michael Lefkow were found by the judge in the basement of her Chicago home Feb. 28. Humphrey had been visiting from her home in suburban Denver.
'People loved her'
“She was an amazing woman. People loved her. She brought a fresh presence wherever she went,” Pastor Patti Anderson said. “She was incredibly bright and incredibly well-read. She was very rich in language, a self-educated woman. Bright, inquisitive and she didn’t settle for easy answers.”
Many of Humphrey’s poems were prominently displayed in the church lobby Saturday.
Humphrey had been active for 25 years with Network Ministries, a shelter and church in Denver that helped the homeless and mentally ill, said senior minister John Hicks.
“It’s a place where we get together and love folks,” said Hicks, who led the funeral. “She’s been a very good friend.”
Hicks also directly addressed the slaying in his eulogy.
“I just don’t want to walk around the word murder. Donna was murdered. Someone took her life,” he said.
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