Deadly Duo | Sienky Lallemand and Lisa Toney | Serial Killer Documentary
Marcus Toney, 37, died Feb. 15, 2000, when he and a friend opened a gift-wrapped package, containing a pipe bomb, in his South Side apartment.
Prosecutors say Lisa Toney, 45, conspired with Sienky Lallemand to steal Marcus Toney's identity, acquire fraudulent credit cards under his name and then kill him.
Lallemand didn't testify in the trial, but he helped prosecutors after an agreement was reached that the death penalty would not be sought in his case.
Egan said Lisa Toney and Lallemand had hoped to have a friend shoot Marcus Toney in January 2000 inside the couple's home, after Lisa Toney obtained an order of protection following a fight. But Egan said the plan of a self-defense shooting failed when Marcus Toney never entered the home.
To convince jurors that Lisa Toney and Lallemand were engaged in a conspiracy, Egan pointed to dozens of telephone calls between the two, including 17 she never reported to police during the two months authorities were looking for Lallemand.
"At each and every turn in this criminal conspiracy, who is Sienky Lallemand talking to?" Egan asked. "He's talking to Lisa Toney."
Egan said the two spoke nine times on the day Lallemand was at a Michigan hardware store buying supplies for the pipe bomb.
But Toney's attorney, Gwendolyn Anderson, said just because the two frequently talked and stayed in hotel rooms together doesn't mean they conspired to commit murder. "You can't speculate that she was talking to him about bombmaking," she said.
Anderson also questioned the credibility of the government's witnesses, pointing out that several are felons and others have entered into beneficial plea agreements with prosecutors, including Lallemand.
Title: Deadly Duo | Sienky Lallemand and Lisa Toney | Serial Killer Documentary
Published on Mar 1, 2016
Uploaded by: Serial Killers Documentary
Prosecutors say Lisa Toney, 45, conspired with Sienky Lallemand to steal Marcus Toney's identity, acquire fraudulent credit cards under his name and then kill him.
Lallemand didn't testify in the trial, but he helped prosecutors after an agreement was reached that the death penalty would not be sought in his case.
Egan said Lisa Toney and Lallemand had hoped to have a friend shoot Marcus Toney in January 2000 inside the couple's home, after Lisa Toney obtained an order of protection following a fight. But Egan said the plan of a self-defense shooting failed when Marcus Toney never entered the home.
To convince jurors that Lisa Toney and Lallemand were engaged in a conspiracy, Egan pointed to dozens of telephone calls between the two, including 17 she never reported to police during the two months authorities were looking for Lallemand.
"At each and every turn in this criminal conspiracy, who is Sienky Lallemand talking to?" Egan asked. "He's talking to Lisa Toney."
Egan said the two spoke nine times on the day Lallemand was at a Michigan hardware store buying supplies for the pipe bomb.
But Toney's attorney, Gwendolyn Anderson, said just because the two frequently talked and stayed in hotel rooms together doesn't mean they conspired to commit murder. "You can't speculate that she was talking to him about bombmaking," she said.
Anderson also questioned the credibility of the government's witnesses, pointing out that several are felons and others have entered into beneficial plea agreements with prosecutors, including Lallemand.
Title: Deadly Duo | Sienky Lallemand and Lisa Toney | Serial Killer Documentary
Published on Mar 1, 2016
Uploaded by: Serial Killers Documentary

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