Wednesday, September 4, 2024

Vicious murderer get the soft on crime treatment

Las Vegas teenagers plead guilty to killing classmate

Brandon Drenon
BBC News
Getty Images Four teens accused of murdered appeared in Las Vegas court on TuesdayGetty Images
Four teens accused of murder appeared in a Las Vegas court on Tuesday

Four Las Vegas teenagers who beat their high school classmate to death have escaped a lengthy sentence for murder after striking a plea deal. 

Jonathan Lewis Jr, 17, died in hospital days after he was stomped, kicked and punched unconscious in an alleyway last November.

His killers, aged 16 and 17 at the time of the attack, were to be tried for second-degree murder in adult court, but admitted manslaughter in a plea deal that will see them spend an unspecified period in juvenile detention.

The victim's mother, Melissa Ready, told local media: "There's literally no one being held accountable with true punishment for my son's murder. It's disgusting."

Family handout Jonathan Lewis JrFamily handout
Jonathan Lewis Jr died from severe head injuries six days after he was beaten

She told the Las Vegas Review-Journal she opposed the deal and was not even told about it when it was struck in August.

"They knew when they were stomping on my child's head that he was going to die. They should be accountable as adults," she said. "They made an adult choice." 

The killers, Treavion Randolph, Dontral Beaver, Gianni Robinson - all now 17 years old - and Damien Hernandez, who has turned 18 since the attack, were charged in January.

Nevada can prosecute children as young as 13 for murder. However, those found guilty in the juvenile system in Clark County, which includes Las Vegas, can be kept in juvenile custody until they are 21. 

They may be released earlier on parole if they complete rehabilitation programmes. 

District Attorney Steve Wolfson defended the plea deal, saying it balanced the egregious facts of the case against potential legal challenges had it gone to trial.

Mr Wolfson added that the juvenile detention system would offer the killers more suitable resources for rehabilitation.

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