UPDATE: 12/04/18 2:35 P.M.

A woman whose husband is awaiting trial on an attempted-murder charge was sentenced to 30 days in jail and one year of community service for role in an alleged shooting incident in Marietta.

Hanah Clark was sentenced Monday in Washington County Common Pleas Court for her guilty plea to a tampering-with-evidence charge.

She is scheduled to begin serving her sentence in the Washington County Jail on Jan. 4, according to a spokeswoman for the Washington County prosecuting attorney's office.

Marietta Police arrested Clark, along with her husband, Austin Lightfritz, in May after gunshots were fired during an altercation involving several people on Lancaster Street.

Authorities said Clark helped Lightfritz hide a .38 caliber handgun used in the shooting.

Lightfritz also faces charges of felonious assault and tampering with evidence.

His trial date was set for Dec. 10, but his attorney filed a motion to have the trial continued.

A man is charged with attempted murder after Marietta Police say he tried to shoot a man who was fighting with his mother on Lancaster Street on Sunday morning.

At 4:18 A.M. Sunday, Marietta Police officers responded to a report of a fight in which someone fired gunshots on Lancaster Street in Marietta.

Witnesses told officers a man and a woman were fighting outside 311 Lancaster St. in Marietta.

The witnesses said another man, later identified as Austin Leroy Lightfritz, 19, stood outside 401 Lancaster St. and fired a handgun twice into the air.

He then ran to the parking lot, firing the gun once toward the man involved in the fight.

Police said Lightfritz then walked up to that man, placed a gun to his head, and fired. Witnesses told police the bullet missed because the man pulled away just before the gunshot.

Witnesses told officers that Lightfritz then ran north on Smith Street and got into a vehicle with his wife, Hanah Elizabeth Clark, 19, of Scottsville, Va., and they drove away.

Investigators discovered Lightfritz is the son of the woman involved in the fight and his last known residential address was in Marietta.

Officers tried to question the man and woman involved in the fight, but they both refused to speak with officers about the incident.

Later, detectives obtained video of the fight and shooting, in which a man identified as Lightfritz was seen pulling a handgun from his right front pants pocket and pointing it toward a local business.

Detectives showed the video to the woman, later identified as Lightfritz's mother, who denied that Lightfritz was at the scene during the fight.

The man who was shot at still refused to speak to investigators.

Officer’s convinced the woman to get Clark to convince Lightfritz to turn himself in.

Minutes later, officers met with Lightfritz and Clark at a business on Second Street in Marietta.

Lightfritz was taken to the Marietta Police Department, where he admitted to standing in front of 401 Lancaster St. and firing the gun twice in the air, as he yelled at the man to keep his hands off his mother.

Lightfritz told police he then ran into the parking lot of 311 Lancaster St., firing the gun once as he tried to shoot the man.

He said he then attempted to strike the man in the head with the gun, which caused the gun to fire beside his head.

Lightfritz said he then left the scene with Clark, in her vehicle, and hid the gun at another location.

Lightfritz guided officers to 829 Ridge St., where he had hidden the .380 caliber handgun he used in the shooting and the clothes he wore during the shooting.

Police say, at this point, no person is known to have been struck by a bullet during the shooting, but one bullet hole was found in the door of a taxi cab parked at 311 Lancaster St.

Lightfritz was charged with attempted murder.

He was arraigned in Marietta Municipal Court and remains in the Washington County on a $100,000 bond.

Clark was charged with obstructing official business, a misdemeanor, because police say she allegedly misled officers during the investigation.

Marietta Police say she was released on a personal-recognizance bond.

Lightfritz and Clark are scheduled to appear in municipal court on June 6.