June 2, 2006 - 3:36pm
By DERRILL HOLLY
Associated Press Writer
UPPER MARLBORO, Md. (AP) - A Prince George's County man was sentenced Friday to life in prison for trying to kill his estranged wife, who was set on fire last year at the cell phone store where she worked.
The attack happened Oct. 10, 2005, when Roger B. Hargrave walked into a T-Mobile store in Clinton, poured liquid on Yvette Cade's head from a soda bottle, then chased after her - lighting a match when she fell to the ground outside.
Hargrave asked for forgiveness before his sentencing as he tearfully read a written statement. "What I did was insane," he said. "Never did I intend to kill Yvette Cade."
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Jurors in April found Hargrave guilty on all charges against him - attempted first-degree murder, attempted second-degree murder and assault.
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The case attracted national attention after it was reported that a judge lifted a protective order against Hargrave about three weeks before the attack.
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http://www.wtopnews.com/?nid=25&sid=774164
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Aug 15, 2006 7:02 pm US/Eastern
Yvette Cade Seeks Justice Against Judge Palumbo
by Mike Hellgren
BALTIMORE (WJZ) ― Too little too late. That's how Yvette Cade, the woman set on fire by her estranged husband, is describing the removal of the judge who failed to protect her.
"He should not be exempt from facing me in the court of law, and being confronted with his own behavior and attitude towards me," Cade said in a press conference Monday.
Weeks before she was doused with gasoline and set on fire, Palumbo ignored Cade's pleas that her husband was intimidating her. On September 19th, he dismissed a protective order that 31-year-old Yvette Cade had obtained against 33-year-old Roger Hargrave.
"I want an immediate, absolute divorce," Cade told Palumbo. "I'd like to be six-foot-five, but that's not what we do here," Palumbo responded.
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Palumbo was placed on administrative duty two weeks after the attack. His problems expanded in April when the Maryland Judicial Disabilities Commission accused him of engaging in a pattern of misconduct in domestic violence cases, likening three women seeking protective order to "buses that come along every ten minutes."
But a month before Palumbo was scheduled to face a misconduct hearing, he abruptly retired, prompting the Maryland Judicial Disabilities Commission to drop its charges against him.
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While Cade is happy to see the judge off the bench, she says he shouldn't be able to retire and collect pension without facing her in court. She's asking for a public outcry and hopes Governor Ehrlich's office will take steps to discipline Palumbo. "They should not be able to walk away from the disastrous effects of their decisions," said Shereen Jackson, Cade's sister.
More at link:
http://wjz.com/topstories/Yvette.Cade.Judge.2.431951.html