An East Quogue man was sentenced to life in prison without the possibility of parole after a jury found him guilty of murdering and torturing his longtime friend.
On September 27, 2024, Allen and the victim, Christopher Hahn, 43, spent the evening at a bar before heading back to Allen’s East Quogue home. The two had been friends since high school.
A few minutes after midnight, Allen began to brutally beat Hahn for approximately 18 minutes, the sounds of which were captured on Allen’s exterior surveillance video. The rear exterior surveillance video then captured Allen dragging the bruised and semi-conscious victim onto the rear deck.
Hahn was left on the back deck brutally injured and unable to stand. Later, Allen returned to the rear deck and repeatedly struck the victim’s head and body with a baseball bat. Allen, who was aware that the victim was alive and in distress, was captured on video leaving and then returning with a plastic bag, then placing the bag over Hahn’s head and securing it with a loose knot.
Allen then sat on a lawn chair a few feet from the victim while watching him struggle to breathe for approximately eight minutes. Allen then retrieved a large knife from inside his home and slowly stabbed Hahn in the neck 10 times. He stood over the victim and watched as he took his last breaths, six hours after the torture began.
After the murder, Allen covered Hahn with a blanket and then attempted to clean the blood inside the house and on the back deck. Allen also contacted his handyman to help him clean his house. When the handyman arrived, he observed blood throughout the home and saw the victim’s body covered by the blanket on the back deck. Allen told the handyman that he could not leave the home, given what he had just observed. The handyman, after persuading Allen to allow him to leave the home, fled and called the police. Allen was apprehended by law enforcement at his home shortly thereafter.
On January 21, 2026, Allen was convicted of Murder in the First Degree, a Class A felony, and Tampering with Physical Evidence, a Class E felony, after a jury trial heard before Supreme Court Justice Timothy P. Mazzei.
On February 26, 2026, Allen was sentenced to life in prison without the possibility of parole.
“Christopher Hahn deserved better than to have his life violently taken by someone he once trusted,” said Suffolk County District Attorney Ray Tierney. “For torture such as occurred here, a life sentence without parole is the only appropriate sentence.”
