A former Northwestern University professor who was convicted in the 2017 stabbing death of his boyfriend has been sentenced to 53 years in prison. 

Wyndham Lathem, 47, a renowned microbiologist, was sentenced Tuesday.

Cook County Judge Charles Burns called the grisly killing of Trenton James Cornell-Duranleau, 26, “cold-blooded” and an “execution,” Associated Press reported. 

Cornell-Duranleau was stabbed more than 70 times on July 27, 2017, in an attack so brutal one of the blades found in the apartment was broken, prosecutors previously said.

Lathem fled Chicago after the attack. Both he and co-conspirator Andrew Warren, an Oxford University financial officer at the time of the slaying, were apprehended after an eight-day manhunt.

Prosecutors said the two met on the internet and made a plan to kill someone, then kill themselves. They said the plot was formed months before Lathem paid for Warren to travel to Chicago.

Warren accepted a plea deal in 2019 for a 45-year prison sentence, in which he testified against Lathem. 

Lathem’s defense lawyer did not immediately respond to NBC News’ request for comment.

Associated Press contributed.

Source: | This article originally belongs to Nbcnews.com

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