Florida man guilty; used claw hammer, knife to kill family

Posted by Larita Shotwell on Sunday, September 15, 2024
Donald Hartung Sr., 63, is now facing the death penalty

Donald Hartung Sr., 63, is now facing the death penalty 

A Florida man could get a death sentence after being found guilty of using a claw hammer, knife and gun to kill his mother and half-brothers.

Jurors in Pensacola convicted Donald Hartung Sr., 63, on three counts of premeditated, first-degree murder. 

His mother, Voncile Smith, 77, and two half-brothers, John Smith, 49, and Richard Smith, 47, were found dead in their home July 31, 2015. 

All were struck multiple times with a claw hammer and their throats were slit. Richard Smith was also shot in his right ear.

Assistant State Attorney Bridgette Jensen told jurors Hartung had been written out of his mother's will and believed he would never get the money - nearly $900,000 - unless his family members died.

Defense attorney Michael Griffin said his client didn't know about the will and had nothing to hide from law enforcers, who never investigated any other suspect. 

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Marlin Purifoy, another inmate who testified in hopes of reducing his own sentence, testified that Hartung confessed to the killings while behind bars.

His mother, Voncile Smith, 77, was found dead along with her two other sons in their Pensacola home in July 2015

His mother, Voncile Smith, 77, was found dead along with her two other sons in their Pensacola home in July 2015

John William Smith Richard Thomas Smith

John William Smith (left) and Richard Thomas Smith (right) were found dead along with their mother. They had all been beaten with a claw hammer and had their throats slit

Hartung denied the charges

Hartung denied the charges

Hartung told Purifoy that he 'tortured his mother by cutting her pinkie in order to get safe combinations,' Jensen said. 

'How can Marlin Purifoy know that? The medical examiner didn't know that.'

Purifoy said other inmates feared Hartung because he claimed to have Wiccan beliefs, and that he feigned an interest in voodoo to gain Hartung's confidence before he confessed.  

They initially alleged that the killings were meant to coincide with the Blue Moon. 

Retired professor and ordained Wiccan minister Paul Larson testified Monday that human sacrifices are not a part of modern Wiccans' religious practices.

The case now moves to the penalty phase. 

The house in Pensacola where the bodies were found. It is unclear where the $900,000 prosecutors referred to came from

The house in Pensacola where the bodies were found. It is unclear where the $900,000 prosecutors referred to came from 

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