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Family toasts mother after murder conviction

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Their bodies were buckled in the back seat. Blake's wounds indicated he had raised his arm to shield himself.

Vaughn blamed his wife. His lawyers told jurors she was suicidal over marital strife. They suggested she shot her husband in the wrist and leg, and then killed the children and herself.

Prosecutors balked. They told jurors to ask themselves how a woman who disliked guns could have grazed her husband with two bullets, but with a marksman's expertise shot her children in the head.

For the most part, Vaughn never displayed a hint of guilty conscience or concern about his kids after the killings, prosecutors said. But in a video shown at trial, he seemed haunted, at least momentarily, when left alone in an interview room with a crime-scene photo of his son's bloodied body. Video shows him staring at the picture, then pushing it away, then covering it up.

Prosecutor Chris Regis likened it to Edgar Allen Poe's "The Tell-Tale Heart," in which a killer goes mad as he starts to hear his victim's beating heart.

"That picture is like a Tell-Tale Heart. It's beating louder, louder, louder," he said.

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Follow Michael Tarm at www.twitter.com/mtarm

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