Heather Mack, convicted in Bali of killing mom and stuffing body in suitcase, sentenced to 26 years in prison

Heather Mack, 27, lived with her mother in Oak Park

NBC Universal, Inc. Heather Mack, the daughter of a Chicago woman whose body was found stuffed inside a suitcase at an Indonesian resort island, was expected to be sentenced Wednesday. Jen DeSalvo has more.

An American woman who pleaded guilty to helping kill her own mother and stuffing the body in a suitcase during a luxury vacation in Bali has been sentenced to more than two decades in prison.

During a Chicago hearing Wednesday, a judge sentenced Heather Mack to 26 years behind bars.

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"This was a brutal premeditated crime and there was an effort to cover it up," Judge Michael Kennelly said. "Seven-year sentence is not sufficient for that, I don’t care how bad it was."

Federal prosecutors had recommended a 28-year prison sentence for Mack, which is considerably more time behind bars than the 15 years her defense lawyers requested as she was sentenced for conspiring to kill Sheila von Wiese-Mack in 2014.

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The government also wanted the 28-year-old Mack to get five years of supervised release, a $250,000 fine and restitution of $262,708. In a filing last week, prosecutors said the recommended sentence “is warranted and sufficient, but not greater than necessary to serve a just and appropriate punishment for Mack’s heinous crime.”

The sentencing hearing began Wednesday morning with testimony from Bill Wiese, Wiese-Mack’s brother and Mack’s uncle. He asked Kennelly to impose the maximum sentence possible, saying Mack has never shown remorse.

“If it were up to me, Heather would spend the rest of her life behind bars,” Wiese said.

Mack, who wore an orange jumpsuit, orange slip-on shoes and glasses, remained mostly impassive as her uncle spoke, occasionally looking at attendees and giving small smiles to some.

She later spoke at the hearing herself, saying she loves her mother and regrets her actions.

Mack pleaded guilty last June to one count of conspiring to kill von Wiese-Mack with her then-boyfriend to gain access to a $1.5 million trust fund. Prosecutors have said Mack, then 18 and pregnant, covered her mother’s mouth while Tommy Schaefer bludgeoned Wiese-Mack with a fruit bowl in a hotel room.

Prosecutors have said Mack and Schaefer had planned the killing for months, and that video evidence showed Mack and Schaefer trying to get the small suitcase containing Wiese-Mack’s body into an Indonesian taxicab.

Mack, who lived with her mother in suburban Chicago’s Oak Park, served seven years of her 10-year Indonesian sentence for her 2015 conviction of being an accessory to Wiese-Mack’s murder. She was deported in 2021 and U.S. agents arrested her on her arrival at Chicago’s O’Hare International Airport.

Mack’s then-6-year-old daughter was with her when she was arrested. The girl was placed with a relative after a custody fight.

Mack’s lawyers sought a 15-year prison term, but with credit for her seven years in the Indonesian prison. She will automatically get credit for the more than two years she has spent in custody in Chicago.

“For the taxpayers to incur the hundreds of thousands to millions of dollars to incarcerate Ms. Mack for an extended period of time within the BOP is particularly unnecessary,” attorney Michael Leonard said in a recent court filing, referring to the U.S. Bureau of Prisons.

The plea agreement called for a sentence of no more than 28 years and for two other charges against Mack to be dropped.

Schaefer was convicted of murder and he is serving an 18-year sentence in Indonesia. He is charged in the same U.S. indictment. His mother, Kia Walker, was in the courtroom Wednesday for Mack’s sentencing.

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