By Mensah M. Dean
The Philadelphia Daily News
PHILADELPHIA — Edward Wilson, the West Philadelphia man who blew off part of his face with the same shotgun he used to murder his ex-girlfriend in March 2009, yesterday said he was sorry — as best as he could.
Common Pleas Judge Rose Marie DeFino-Nastasi then sentenced the disfigured man to 15 to 30 years in state prison.
In July, a jury found Wilson, 58, guilty of third-degree murder and possession of an instrument of crime in the death of Antoinette Austin, 26, who had been his live-in girlfriend for eight years before they broke up in October 2008.
Assistant District Attorney James Berardinelli, who argued at trial for a first-degree murder conviction, which carries a life sentence, told the jury that Wilson had used a rubber $10,000 check to lure Austin to meet with him and snapped when she refused to reconcile.
Wilson shot Austin in the ribs at the edge of the Cobbs Creek Golf Course, near 75th Street and Lansdowne Avenue, then went home and shot himself during a standoff with police.
“While the sentence isn’t exactly what we asked for, it is a very substantial sentence and, given his age, it should keep him behind bars for the rest of his life,” said Berardinelli, who asked the judge to give Wilson the maximum sentence of 22 1/2 to 45 years.
“It is what it is. It won’t bring my daughter back, but we’ll try to move on,” said Pam Austin, the victim’s mother.
During the trial, defense attorney Thomas Burke argued for a voluntary-manslaughter conviction, contending that Wilson had acted out of passion and meant only to kill himself.
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