Updated
Updated · The Associated Press · Jul 13
Robert Tulloch Resentenced to 45 Years for 2001 Dartmouth Professors' Murders
Updated
Updated · The Associated Press · Jul 13

Robert Tulloch Resentenced to 45 Years for 2001 Dartmouth Professors' Murders

3 articles · Updated · The Associated Press · Jul 13

Summary

  • 45 years to life replaced Robert Tulloch’s original no-parole sentence, making the 43-year-old eligible for parole at 62 under a deal accepted Monday in New Hampshire court.
  • Juvenile-sentencing rulings drove the change: Tulloch was 17 in 2001, and the U.S. and New Hampshire supreme courts have barred life-without-parole terms for juveniles.
  • Veronica Zantop, the victims’ daughter, told the court Tulloch had planned the killings in a cold-blooded, predatory way and said she believes he remains dangerous.
  • Tulloch offered brief remorse but rejected being labeled a psychopath; his co-defendant James J. Parker, who was 16 and pleaded to second-degree murder, was paroled in 2024.
  • The case stems from a 2001 home invasion in Hanover in which the teenagers posed as students conducting an environmental survey before killing Half and Susanne Zantop.

Insights

After a brutal teen murder, can brain science truly justify a second chance decades later?
A killer's prison record is nearly perfect. But can good behavior truly erase a brutal past?
One killer is free, the other waits 20 years. What really sealed their vastly different fates?