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Christopher Vaughn guilty of killing wife, 3 children

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He also said jurors were struck by Vaughn's lack of emotion during often gruesome testimony.

"If you watched (Vaughn) throughout the trial as we did, I think you'd come to the same conclusion," Lachat said.

Glasgow said the quickness of the jury's deliberations showed there was "little doubt in their mind" as to Vaughn's guilt.

He also said the case was one of the most brutal he'd seen.

"This case is not just a murder, it's an atrocity," Glasgow said in remarks outside the courthouse. "To annihilate your family -- I can't think of a more horrific crime."

"He'll spend the rest of his life staring at the cold walls of his prison cell, then he'll meet his maker for his real punishment," Glasgow said.

Vaughn faces a life sentence. The judge set sentencing for Nov. 26, the same date as sentencing for the defendant in another recent high-profile murder trial: Drew Peterson.

Closing arguments in Vaughn's trial began this morning after jurors spent five weeks hearing from dozens of witnesses, viewing horrific crime scene photos and watching hours of police interrogation videos.

Christopher Vaughn’s story about what happened the day his wife and three children were shot to death in their SUV is “so ridiculous” that it alone proves his guilt, Will County Assistant State’s Attorney Chris Regis said in closing arguments.

Regis took jurors point-by-point through Vaughn’s statements to the police in the hours after the killings, saying Vaughn purposefully fed police "a back story" to try to get them to think his wife had shot and wounded him, killed the children and then committed suicide.

With his family slain, Vaughn claimed he couldn't remember what happened, yet offered up unsolicited details about problems he and his wife, Kimberly, were having in their marriage and the plans they had to visit a Springfield water park.

“His story is so contradictory and so filled with holes that it completely reeks of guilt,” Regis shouted.

Regis said that a few hours into the first interview, when police detectives confronted Vaughn with information that his family had been killed, his response was almost laughable. The prosecutor likened one part of Vaughn’s statement to a bad, 1980s-era Chuck Norris film, clunky dialogue and all. 

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