From News Nation:
“Colorado school shooter
sentenced to life in prison”
A judge on Friday sentenced a
former student to life in prison without parole for a 2019 shooting inside a
suburban Denver high school that killed one teenager and injured eight others,
telling the defendant he had shown no remorse and had failed to help a
devastated community understand his actions. Devon Erickson, now 20, was
convicted in June of 46 charges, including first-degree murder in the death of
Kendrick Castillo, an 18-year-old senior hailed as a hero for trying to stop
the attack on a classroom at STEM School Highlands Ranch, south of Denver.
Prosecutors said Erickson
partnered with fellow student Alec McKinney in the May 7, 2019, shooting.
McKinney told investigators that he planned the attack for weeks and intended
to target classmates who repeatedly mocked him because he was transgender,
according to court documents. Since Erickson was 18 at the time of the attack,
he faced a mandatory life sentence. After a lengthy and emotional hearing in
which survivors shared their pain, trauma and disruptions to their lives, Judge
Theresa Michelle Slade added hundreds of years of prison time to Erickson’s
life sentence for multiple charges of attempted murder and other counts. Wearing
handcuffs, a red-and-white-striped prison suit and a blue mask amid the
coronavirus pandemic, Erickson displayed virtually no emotion except for
blowing his nose into his mask after sentencing. But just after his parents,
sister and grandfather told him they loved him in their testimony, his voice
broke when the judge asked if he wanted to speak. He declined. “I don’t think
there is anything I can say to you, Mr. Erickson, that would make any
difference,” Slade said, recounting how the shooting had devastated not only
those at the school and their families but untold numbers of people beyond the
suburban community where the school is located. The judge said Erickson never
tried to explain his actions, leaving a gaping hole for a community seeking at
least some sense of closure. “I don’t believe, Mr. Erickson, at least for now,
that it makes a difference to you,” Slade said. “So what you do the rest of
your life in prison, that’s not on me. It’s on you.” McKinney, who was 16 at
the time of the shooting, was sentenced to life in prison last year but could
become eligible for parole after about 20 years under a program for juvenile
offenders.
Erickson and McKinney targeted a
classroom of students sitting in the dark as they watched a movie at the end of
their senior year. The two entered through separate doors to maximize the
number of students they could kill, prosecutors said. Erickson and McKinney
concocted a “victim-hero” plan in which McKinney would either kill himself or
be killed by Erickson, prosecutors said. The shootings stopped when Castillo
and two other students, Joshua Jones and Brendan Bialy, charged Erickson, whose
gun jammed after he fired four times. A school security guard apprehended
McKinney. Defense attorneys argued that Erickson was pressured into
participating by McKinney, who testified against Erickson after pleading guilty
last year. The defense also suggested that Castillo was accidentally shot as he
pushed Erickson against a wall. Statements Friday by teachers, former students,
their parents, and Castillo’s mother and father wove a harrowing picture of
lives shattered by enduring trauma, panic attacks, recurring nightmares of
gunshots, blood, screams and heavily armed SWAT teams rescuing those in hiding
inside the school. One teacher said she became so frightened of working with
older students and worrying about what they might do that she now teaches
younger children. Jones and Bialy, who were shot while helping Castillo subdue
Erickson, didn’t hide their disgust. “He killed Kendrick, and he didn’t care,”
Jones said, nearly heaving at the witness stand. “I would implore you to put
him in jail for as long as you can.” “The defendant is a loser,” Bialy said.
“He walked into a classroom, armed, with vulnerable students, and he lost.” Castillo’s
parents, John and Maria Castillo, proudly, if painfully, described their son as
an only child who was happy — a young man of faith always ready to help others.
“We don’t want to forget Kendrick, but it’s an emotional journey that most
people will never understand, and I hope they don’t,” John Castillo said.
Defense attorney David Kaplan insisted
that Erickson was “exceptionally remorseful.” Witnesses and family described
him as an unselfish and cheerful person who helped others and loved school, a
jazz singer who gave lessons to younger students — and someone who fell under
the sway of McKinney. Erickson’s father, Jim Erickson, read aloud the names of
those injured and apologized to them, teachers, students, law enforcement and
the broader community. “We pray for these people every day,” he said, crying.
“We hope that they can find peace, and we hope that they can find forgiveness —
and I know that’s a hard ask, forgiveness.” At his sentencing last year,
McKinney said he did not want leniency. But he also suggested the shooting was
Erickson’s idea.
^ I would have liked to see him
get the Death Penalty, but this is the next best thing for this murderer. ^
https://www.newsnationnow.com/us-news/west/colorado-school-shooter-sentenced-to-life-in-prison/
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