PORTLAND, Maine — A Portland man serving 60 years in prison for strangling his girlfriend and cutting off her head was not insane at the time of the killing and is criminally responsible for his conduct, Maine’s highest court ruled Tuesday.
In a unanimous decision, the Maine Supreme Judicial Court rejected Chad Gurney’s appeal of his murder and arson convictions for killing 18-year-old Zoe Sarnacki on May 25, 2009, in his apartment and setting fire to her body to cover up the crime. Superior Court Justice Roland Cole last year rejected Gurney’s insanity defense and sentenced him to 50 years for murder and another 10 years for arson.
On appeal, Gurney’s attorney told Maine’s supreme court justices that Gurney, 30, wasn’t criminally responsible because he was suffering mental problems and having a psychotic episode that made him delusional. Prosecutors maintained that the evidence showed Gurney knew what he was doing when he killed Sarnacki and knew it was wrong.
Nobody disputed that Gurney wasn’t completely normal after being injured in a bad motor vehicle accident in 2005 and that he has a “peculiar” personality, but those things didn’t make him insane, said Deputy Attorney General William Stokes. Even if Gurney were mentally ill, that doesn’t mean he was insane at the time of the killing, he said.
“The mere fact that you have a mental disease or defect — and I’m not so sure he did — doesn’t answer the question of insanity because you have to lack the substantial capacity to appreciate the wrongfulness of your conduct,” Stokes said. “People with mental illness can appreciate right from wrong. They do all the time.”
Gurney’s attorney, Sarah Churchill, did not immediately return a phone call for comment.
The facts of the case were never in dispute, but Gurney’s mental state at the time was.
During the trial, the defense contended that Gurney’s mental health problems started at Liberty University in Virginia when his lacrosse team’s 15-passenger van crashed in 2005. He suffered a severe head injury and other injuries that led to 20 surgeries. He later returned to Maine and lived off a multimillion-dollar insurance settlement.
Gurney’s attorney said Gurney’s psychotic break stemmed from a combination of his head injury and withdrawal from prescription medication. A psychiatrist who first evaluated Gurney more than a year after the crime testified that Gurney suffered from a psychotic disorder and couldn’t appreciate the wrongfulness of his actions.
But prosecutors maintained that Gurney was simply angry because Sarnacki had slept with someone else while he was out of town, and later refused his request to quit her job at a bagel shop and join him on a trip to Thailand, where he hoped to further his interest in Eastern religion.
In its 20-page ruling, the supreme court said the lower court judge found the reports of physicians and psychologists who examined Gurney closer to the date of Sarnacki’s death more credible than that of Gurney’s expert.
Supreme court justices also rejected Gurney’s attorney’s claims that the lower court erred in denying motions to suppress evidence found on Gurney’s Facebook account, his laptop computer and cellphone, as well as a reference to a beheading video found his computer hard drive.



Now enough playing around with this animal and put him down.
If you See something, Say something.
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NOT for 911 use.
Good. Unfortunately, there’s no capital punishment, so now go rot in prison, you POS.
And now a haiku for your reading pleasure.
POS
POS
Go to jail
Rot a bit
You POS
I’m not a psychiatrist but one has to wonder at the lead in paragraph,
” A Portland man serving 60 years in prison for strangling his girlfriend and cutting off her head was not insane at the time of the killing and is criminally responsible for his conduct,…”
How could you be sane and do this to someone?
I also think I have a sense of humanity, of compassion, and therefore I vacillate between being in favor of the death penalty and not favoring the death penalty. Having said that, I unreservedly believe there is no redeeming reason for not killing this guy. Maybe stake him out on the local clam flat at low tide and walk away. What is the state going to do, release him in 60 years? Good grief! Then again, perhaps living in a prison for 60 years is worse than dying and is a better sentence after all. At the very least he should be made to work for his sustenance or starve. I just don’t know.
A person that does what Mr. Gurney did is filled with rage directed at people/animals. Such a person has no remorse for his violent actions (I am intentionally using he/him because this type of person is more often than not a male).
Make no mistake though, the above mentioned behavior (there are many more that I didn’t share) does not mean that such a person is mentally ill. Granted, such a person is behaviorally disordered, but not all behavioral disorders are defined as a form of insanity (psychosis, antisocial personality disorder, etc.).
Fortunately, there are only a few people like him (<100/1,000,000 people). I am surprised that he only got 60 years vs. a life sentence. I thank my lucky stars that I don't have to evaluate people like him anymore!
Sane or not, he should not be with the rest of society.
With that kind of cash who cares what the woman was up to..Just go buy another one.