In a packed courtroom in Ballarat, Hannah McGuire's family finally heard the words they have been waiting more than a year to hear: the man found guilty of their daughter's murder, Lachlan Young, will spend 28 years behind bars, with at least 22 years and four months before he is eligible for parole.
It's the end of a long and agonising legal process, one that forced Hannah's parents, Debbie and Glenn, to sit through the details of her final moments.
The 23-year-old teacher's aide was murdered inside the home she once shared with Young. Afterwards, he drove her body to remote bushland, placed her body in her own car and set it alight.
He then used her phone to message her mother, pretending to be Hannah, in a calculated attempt to cover up what he'd done.
Close to 100 people packed court today, with people gasping and exclaiming "yes" as his sentence was handed down.
"You brutally murdered Ms McGuire in the home she lived with you… a place where, as a young woman, she was entitled to feel safe," Justice James Elliott said during sentencing today.
"The level of emotion and heartache that you have caused to Hannah's family, to Hannah's friends, to Hannah's work colleagues, and to the communities of Ballarat and Clunes more generally cannot be overstated.
"This case is yet another example of a male using violence and his superior strength to murder a vulnerable woman who trusted him."
Outside of court, Hannah's parents expressed their relief at the sentence.
"While nothing can bring back what we've lost or erase the pain we continue to carry, today's outcome is an important step in our journey towards healing," she said.























