12 years later, woman who killed husband is freed

Published 5:00 am Wednesday, October 10, 2012

PORTLAND — Twelve years after killing her husband in a northeastern Oregon campground, Liysa Northon has left the Coffee Creek Correctional Facility in Wilsonville.

Now 50 years old, Northon pleaded guilty in 2001 in Enterprise to manslaughter in the shooting death of Chris Northon, a Hawaiian Airlines pilot with a home in Bend.

She said she was a victim of domestic violence who defended herself. Prosecutors said she aimed to gain life insurance and other widow’s benefits and property.

The story was the subject of true-crime writer Ann Rule’s 2003 book, “Heart Full of Lies,” a book Northon and her new husband argue is riddled with errors.

The Oregonian reports Northon married freelance writer Rick Swart while in prison, and after her release Tuesday she has a new home waiting in the Eagle Creek community in Clackamas County.

Her release comes 12 years to the day after her husband’s slaying.

Swart was also the author of a 2011 story in a weekly Seattle newspaper about Northon’s case and Rule’s book. Swart did not disclose in the story that he was romantically involved with Northon.

Northon said that her then-husband was an alcoholic and drug addict before the shooting, and she feared for her life and those of her children.

“Chris had beaten the crap out of me,” she said. “I defended my child and myself, and because of my action, my children got to grow up.”

Chris Northon’s family denies he had a problem with substance abuse, and contends Liysa Northon killed her husband to claim $300,000 in life insurance and control of the couple’s property valued at $1 million, plus get airline widow’s benefits that would allow her to fly free.

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