KANSAS CITY, Mo. _ The woman who ignited gallons of flammable liquids in her nail salon looking to get an insurance check but ended up killing two Kansas City firefighters was sentenced Friday to 74 years in prison.
The stiff sentence for Thu Hong Nguyen was punishment for causing what Assistant Jackson County Prosecutor Dan Nelson called "pain that is real, is ragged and is ongoing" for the families and friends of firefighters John V. Mesh and Larry J. Leggio and for the community.
Jackson County Circuit Court Judge Joel P. Fahnestock sentenced Nguyen to 30 years each for two counts of felony murder, to run consecutively, and seven years each for two counts of second-degree assault on two firefighters who were permanently injured. Those sentences will run consecutive to each other and to the murder sentences.
She also sentenced Nguyen to 30 years and 15 years for two counts of arson, to run concurrently with the others.
Prosecutors had recommended a sentence of 89 years.
Nguyen, 46, will have to serve 85 percent of the murder sentences before becoming eligible for parole.
The sentencing hearing was interrupted when Nguyen appeared to have a breathing problem. Firefighter paramedics were in the courtroom gallery, but a separate crew soon arrived with a stretcher. Nguyen recovered sufficiently for the hearing to resume after about 20 minutes.
At the hearing, relatives of victims of the Oct. 12, 2015, fire testified.
Missy Leggio said she was in the neighborhood of the fire, saw the lights and knew her husband would be among those fighting the blaze. She parked and walked over, hoping to make eye contact with her husband as a signal that she loved him.
"But that didn't happen," Missy Leggio said.
Instead she saw the chaos of a wall collapse. Another firefighter ran over to her and someone put her in a car to take her to Truman Medical Center.
"I remember screaming in the car, 'Is my husband dead?'" Missy Leggio said.
Her husband's body was crushed from head to toe and every organ was damaged, she said.
"So much has been stolen from each one of our lives," Missy Leggio said, attributing it all to Nguyen's "selfish and greed-driven act."
Alyssa Mesh, 19, read a statement written by her 20-year-old sister, Adriana Mesh. In it she remembered her father as a man who "never got hurt or sick or anything. He was a rock." She called him a superhero and the world's best dad.
Adriana wrote of her mother's face when she came to get her at work that night to take her and her three sisters to the hospital. She said it appeared that her father's legs were missing under the hospital sheet. His eyes were closed and his skin was cold. She put her arms around him. The family didn't leave for hours.
"There was six of us and suddenly there was only five," Adriana wrote of her family. "Everything in your life was upside down in a matter of minutes."
Jim Mesh testified about his younger brother.
"We lost a father, a son, a brother, a husband, an uncle and a beloved friend of so many," Jim Mesh said. "Instead of making new memories with John, we talk about the memory of John."
Caitlin Anderson, daughter of injured firefighter Chris Anderson, spoke about how her dad has been forever changed.
Anderson and firefighter Dan Werner were also struck by bricks when the wall fell. Anderson had traumatic brain injury and several fractures and continues to have post-traumatic stress disorder. He is no longer with the fire service. Werner continues to battle depression.
The sentencing capped a nearly three-year ordeal for the families, the Kansas City Fire Department and the city. The department came under criticism for its lack of safety procedures.
Defense attorney Molly Hastings said her side agreed not to bring that up during the trial, but she said that was a contributing factor to the deaths and was worth considering during sentencing.
Hastings also said the case was stacked against Nguyen from the beginning with a powerhouse prosecution team and matchless resources.
"It's never been a fair fight, and they know that," Hastings said, adding that there was no evidence Nguyen ever intended to kill anyone. She said her client continues to maintain her innocence and will file an appeal on Monday.
But Fahnestock found her guilty of six out of seven counts after a weeklong bench trial in July.
Nguyen started the fire before leaving work shortly after 7 p.m. She had purchased eight gallons of acetone and rubbing alcohol that day and put them in a storeroom at the back of her LN Nails and Spa.
Nguyen was the last one out of the shop, one of four commercial spaces on the ground floor; there were 16 apartments on two upper floors. All but one was occupied.
Within minutes, the fire spread up and out through the space between the first and second floors. It quickly became a three-alarm fire battled by 110 firefighters. Within an hour, the eastern wall of the three-story brick building collapsed into an alley.
A commander at the scene had earlier ordered 18 firefighters out of the structure. Most occupants of the apartments got out on their own but some had to be rescued.
Another order went out for firefighters to back away from the building, but some remained in the alley on the east side, next to Snyder's grocery.
Afterward, the fire department was forced to acknowledge that it did not have a clear policy for making sure firefighters get the message when a "collapse zone" is declared. Officials say they have since rectified that by requiring a head count under such a circumstance.
An investigation by the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives found that Nguyen had a part in previous fires and other incidents that resulted in nearly $268,000 in insurance payouts over the years.
The pattern showed Nguyen would acquire a nail salon business, usually in someone else's name, and operate it until a fire or other event led her to file an insurance claim. She would live on the payout for a few months and then repeat the cycle. LN Nails and Spa was insured for $40,000.