Morning Sentinel
GOGAN SLAYING CASE
Woman seeks her old name
By DOUG HARLOW
Staff Writer
Kennebec Journal & Morning Sentinel Tuesday, March 13, 2007

SKOWHEGAN -- A former Hartland woman who spent more than five years in prison for killing her husband in 1999 has petitioned the county probate court to have her name changed.

Vella Gogan, 61, pleaded guilty to manslaughter in the shooting death and mutilation of Eugene Gogan in 1999 and was released from the Maine Correctional Center in Windham last summer.

She filed the necessary paperwork with the Somerset County Registry of Probate last month, according to documents.

Gogan's new name, if the petition is approved March 27 by Probate Judge John Alsop, will be Vella Ruth Pelletier.

"I want to go back to my maiden name," Gogan wrote in the application.

Contacted briefly by telephone Monday morning, Gogan declined to be interviewed.

Gogan originally was charged with murder in the Oct. 1, 1999, death of her husband, who was shot three times in the head as he slept in the couple's home on Route 43, Athens Road. The body of the 65-year-old man was cut into pieces and found six days later in the woods off Route 16 in Mayfield Township, north of Athens village and 25 miles from the couple's home.

Investigators recovered more than a dozen pieces of his body, including the torso and head.

Maine State Police detectives said the rest -- his hands, feet, parts of his legs and arms -- had been buried in shallow holes in the woods.

Vella Gogan said she had acted in self-defense against her husband of 37 years, who had been psychologically and physically abusive to her.

She said she feared her husband had planned to kill her. Two psychologists and two psychiatrists concluded she feared for her life and suffered from "battered-wife syndrome."

But the state prosecutor, Assistant Attorney General Andrew Benson, called Vella Gogan's actions a virtual execution and "the ultimate act of domestic violence."

Family members of Eugene Gogan agreed with Benson, saying the charge should have been murder. In an angry and emotional statement to the court and to Gogan, Susan Estes, a niece, said she felt betrayed by the court system, which she said had gagged family members and treated Eugene Gogan's killer as the victim.

"There's been no justice for his death," she said at the time.

Vella Gogan pleaded guilty to manslaughter in 2001 because she feared a jury might not agree that she acted in self-defense and convict her of murder, which carries a 25-year minimum sentence in Maine.

Gogan was sentenced to 15 years in prison, with all but six years suspended, and six years of probation.

A spokeswoman at the Department of Corrections said Gogan will be on probation until June 2012.

Cindy Dillon, clerk of the probate court in Skowhegan, said Gogan came in herself to file for the name change, a routine act by a widow or a woman who has been divorced.

"She does not have to come in for the hearing," Dillon said. "Adults changing their name don't have to come in unless a judge wants them to."

She said Alsop will review the petition March 27 and sign the order if it is approved and mail a certificate of name change to Gogan at her address on Middle Road, Skowhegan.

M. Michaela Murphy, a Waterville lawyer, along with lawyer Janet Mills of Skowhegan, represented Gogan in the manslaughter case. Murphy said Monday she has not had contact with her former client. Mills said she has spoken with Gogan and said she thought it was time to leave the case to history.

"I think the case is long over with and people should put it behind them," Mills said. "She has paid her dues."

Doug Harlow -- 861-9244

dharlow@centralmaine.com


Reader comments

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papasmurf of skowhegan, ME
Mar 13, 2007 7:55 AM
Did I read that right??!! the case is long over with and she has paid her dues!!!
Hold on...what about sex offenders who offended 20 years ago? are their cases long over? and are their victims still ALIVE! hmmmm but they can go on report for the rest of their lives but a murder don't have to, because we as a messed up gossiping world has nothing better to do than to read about others 20 year old problems...forget the murderer next door.report abuse
TJ of Shenandoah Valley, VA
Mar 13, 2007 8:31 AM
Paid her dues - are you kidding me?!!! She's STILL trying to look like the victim! She was the abuser and you can ask any of their close family members or friends that witnessed it for years. She had two female lawyers that knew she could USE Violence Against Women to receive a lighter sentence. If this case would've gone to trial, the truth would've come out and there may have been justice for Gene. His side of the story was never heard. He wasn't allowed to crap in the woods without her permission and when they first got married in the 1960s he was ordered by her not to have contact with his young children and because he feared her, he didn't for 30 yrs. The next time they saw their father was in a cremation urn. When he started having heart problems in the 1990s and wanted to contact his children because he knew his time on earth was limited - she went off and that's why Gene is no longer with us. She had lost control over him and she couldn't handle it. DEAD MEN DON'T TELL TALES! report abuse
JAS of Skowhegan, ME
Mar 13, 2007 8:52 AM
I DO believe she has "paid her dues". She was a battered woman & HAD been for years. She was afraid for her life,as he had threatened to kill her many times. If she had to wait til he was sleeping to defend her life; so be it. Pure desperation & survival made her commit this act. God bless her, & I wish her luck with the rest of her life. report abuse
Evergreen of Canaan, ME
Mar 13, 2007 12:38 PM
Is the Sentinel really that hard up for news that they need to rehash all of this because someone wants to change their name? Do the reporters actually go to the Probate Court and dig out items to put in the newspaper? How many people out there even knew that she has completed her time and been free since last summer? Has she bothered anyone during that time? Obviously,if the court and attorneys (including the attorney for the State of Maine) thought that six years was a suitable time for the crime, then there must be a whole lot more that went on than what the general public knows. report abuse

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