An emotional sentencing for a man convicted twice of orchestrating the kidnapping and killing of Minneapolis realtor Monique Baugh.
40-year old Lyndon Wiggins was given a life sentence without the possibility of parole. According to court documents, the kidnappers scheduled the real estate showing because they were searching for Jon Mitchell-Momoh, who was Baugh’s boyfriend and father of their children, ages 3 and 1 when she was killed in 2019.
In handing down the sentence, Hennepin County Judge Mark Kappelhoff spoke of the crime.
"Based on my view of the evidence, it's clear to me that you are the criminal architect of a cold, calculated, and cruel criminal scheme that led to the kidnapping and ultimately to the tragic, senseless, and brutal murder of Ms. Baugh, and the attempted murder of Mr. Momoh," said Kappelhoff. "I guess I'll never fully understand the full reasons behind that, but I don't know that that necessarily matters."
Mitchell-Momoh was also shot three times.
"You showed no regard for the lives of Monique Baugh or John Mitchell-Momoh," Kappelhoff added. "You devised and directed the criminal plot that resulted in Ms. Baugh's execution-style murder in a cold and dark alley on New Year's Eve in 2019. Because of you and your co-defendants, two little girls will grow up without their mother, and Monique's mother, daughters, friends, family members will never be able to hug her again."
Last month, Wiggins was found guilty in his redo trial on three charges: aiding and abetting first-degree premeditated murder, aiding and abetting first-degree premeditated attempted murder and aiding and abetting kidnapping.
Monique's mother spoke at the sentencing.
"Monique's absence is felt every day, her void can never be filled, and each day that goes by is a constant reminder of what happened to her," she told the court.
Prosecutors say Monique was lured to a house showing and then kidnapped and killed at the hands of her boyfriend's rival drug dealer who was Lyndon Wiggins.
“Monique Baugh’s family has waited nearly six years for the cases against all defendants to conclude,” Hennepin County Attorney Mary Moriarty said. “Mr. Wiggins played a primary role in Monique’s death, and he is being held accountable. My thoughts are with Monique’s family, and I want to express my gratitude to the jury for their service and to our trial team for securing this conviction.”
Wiggins' original conviction was overturned last year by the State Supreme Court, ruling the trial judge gave erroneous legal instructions to the jury.
"She's with us in our heart, just not in the physical form, but that would be true justice," said Monique's mother. "This is earthly justice, and I'll take it. I'll take it. It's emotional. It's exhausting. This defendant has no idea what heartbreak is until he has been through what we had to endure."
In June 2021, a Hennepin County jury convicted two of Mr. Wiggins’ co-defendants, Cedric Berry and Berry Davis, of aiding and abetting first-degree premeditated murder, aiding and abetting first-degree premeditated attempted murder, aiding and abetting kidnapping, and aiding and abetting first-degree murder while committing kidnapping.
A judge sentenced Mr. Berry and Mr. Davis to life in prison without the possibility of parole.
Elsa Segura, a third co-defendant, pleaded guilty in 2024 to kidnapping to commit great bodily harm. She was sentenced to 240 months; an upward departure from Minnesota Sentencing Guidelines due to the particular cruelty of the crime and the involvement of three or more perpetrators.