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13Aug/080

Inmate gets 4 to 7 more years

WORCESTER— A jail inmate found guilty of manslaughter in the death of his cellmate three years ago was sentenced yesterday to 4 to 7 years’ imprisonment.

Dennis R. Hadley, 52, was charged with murder and assault and battery with a dangerous weapon (shod foot) in the Feb. 23, 2005, death of 42-year-old Daniel McMullen after an altercation in the cell the two men shared at the Worcester County Jail and House of Correction in West Boylston.

A 12-member Worcester Superior Court jury convicted Mr. Hadley of involuntary manslaughter Thursday in the death of Mr. McMullen and acquitted him on the charge of assault and battery with a dangerous weapon.

Judge Peter W. Agnes Jr. sentenced Mr. Hadley to 4 to 7 years in state prison yesterday. Assistant District Attorney Joseph T. Moriarty Jr. recommended a sentence of 12 to 15 years and Mr. Hadley’s lawyer, Margaret R. Guzman, proposed a sentence of time served or a 3- to 4-year prison term for her client.

Mr. McMullen, formerly of Douglas, died from complications of a ruptured spleen caused by blunt trauma, according to a medical examiner’s findings. Prosecutors alleged that Mr. Hadley, while wearing boots, kicked Mr. McMullen in the face and abdomen on the morning of Feb. 3, 2005, after an argument in their cell over a deck of playing cards.

Mr. Hadley, formerly of Rhode Island, told jail officials he pushed Mr. McMullen down after his cellmate poked him in the eye with his finger. He denied kicking Mr. McMullen.

Mr. McMullen, who was serving a sentence for a probation violation on a drunken driving charge at the time, suffered from advanced cirrhosis of the liver and an enlarged spleen, according to testimony at Mr. Hadley’s trial. He was initially treated at St. Vincent Hospital for a cut lip on the morning of the altercation and was returned to the jail. About 15 hours later, he was brought back to the hospital complaining of abdominal pain.

He was admitted at that time after diagnostic tests revealed internal bleeding from a torn spleen. Mr. McMullen developed pneumonia and an infection while hospitalized, lapsed into a coma and died.

Before imposing the 4- to 7-year sentence yesterday, Judge Agnes rejected a suggestion by James Mahoney, the victim’s brother-in-law, that Mr. McMullen’s death was attributable to “a total system failure” at the county jail. Mr. Mahoney said his family believed overcrowding and understaffing at the jail were as much, if not more, to blame for the death of their loved one than Mr. Hadley’s actions.

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