Georgia – A Georgia man was sentenced on Wednesday to Iife in prison without the possIbiIity of paroIe after being convicted of murdering his spouse, 63-year-old LuciIIe, two years ago in Georgia. The jury reached the verdict on July 12, determining that the defendant killed his spouse at their home and then staged the scene to make it look like the woman took her own life.
The investigation into the woman’s death began in Nov. 2023, when the defendant called 911, claiming he had found his wife dead after returning from a waIk. Officers responding to the call arrived at the residence to find the woman lying without clothes across the bed with a severe head injury. Despite his assertion that she had shot herself, no gun, weapon, or shell casings were found at the scene. The defendant appeared calm during police interviews and only showed emotion when police informed him he was the prime suspect.
Detectives led by Detective Carmen examined the scene, uncovering inconsistencies in the defendant’s story. Surveillance footage from the neighborhood recorded the defendant walking to a nearby drainage ditch, where he attempted to discard a rubber mallet—later determined to be the murder weapon—and his cell phone. Investigators also noted the defendant scrubbed himself and cleaned the weapon before calling 911.
The defendant also gave several statements to responding officers, maintaining the suicide narrative and even suggesting a possible break-in. He tried to shift suspicion onto the victim’s granddaughter and her boyfriend. However, forensic evidence, cellphone data, and security camera footage disproved his claims, showing no forced entry and confirming they were not at the home at the time.
The autopsy conducted by the Georgia Bureau of Investigation concluded the defendant died from blunt force trauma and manual strangulation, contradicting the defendant’s suicide claim. The extensive injuries—head fractures, internal bleeding, and spinal trauma—clearly indicated a violent homicide.
During the trial in July 2025, prosecutors revealed the defendant had immigrated to the U.S. on a visa after serving 17 years as a police officer in the U.K. and being dismissed following multiple accusations of se-ual harassment. He later married the victim in 2022 after meeting her just months before. The prosecution alleged the marriage was a sham to help the defendant gain permanent residency. They also presented evidence he had an affair in Florida and that when Lucille confronted him and threatened to expose the marriage, he murdered her to silence her.
Georgia authorities accused the defendant of killing his spouse for multiple reasons, including to prevent her from telling the government that their marriage had been arranged to get him a permanent residency, which would’ve resulted in his deportation. Multiple witnesses corroborated this at trial and testified that the pair wed just months after meeting.
McManus remains in custody after Wednesday’s sentencing hearing. He will serve the remainder of his life in a Georgia state prison with no eligibility for parole, appeals, or sentence reductions.