Current:Home > Stocks4 Las Vegas teens plead guilty in classmate’s deadly beating as part of plea deal -FinanceCore
4 Las Vegas teens plead guilty in classmate’s deadly beating as part of plea deal
View
Date:2025-04-15 19:33:33
LAS VEGAS (AP) — Four Las Vegas teenagers pleaded guilty Tuesday to voluntary manslaughter in the fatal beating of their high school classmate, as part of a deal with prosecutors that kept them from being tried as adults.
The teens originally were charged in January as adults with second-degree murder and conspiracy in connection with the November death of 17-year-old Jonathan Lewis Jr. The attack was captured on cellphone video and shared widely across social media.
Each teen faces incarceration at a juvenile detention center for an undetermined length of time, the Las Vegas Review-Journal reported.
Minors prosecuted in the juvenile court system in Clark County, which includes Las Vegas, do not face traditional jail or prison sentences and instead are released from custody after they complete rehabilitation programs, according to Brigid Duffy, director of the juvenile division of the Clark County district attorney’s office.
The Associated Press is not naming the teens because they were younger than 18 at the time of the Nov. 1, 2023, attack.
Defense lawyer Robert Draskovich, representing one of the four teens, said after court Tuesday that the deal “was a very fair resolution.”
Lewis’ mother, Mellisa Ready, said she does not agree with the plea deal.
“There’s literally no one being held accountable with true punishment for my son’s murder,” she told the newspaper Tuesday. “It’s disgusting.”
In a statement to the AP last month after terms of the deal were made public, District Attorney Steve Wolfson’s office defended the resolution of the case as both thoughtfully addressing the egregious facts and potential legal challenges that prosecutors would have faced at trial.
The statement said the juvenile court system also is better equipped to offer the young defendants resources for rehabilitation.
In Nevada, a teenager facing a murder charge can be charged as an adult if they were 13 or older when the crime occurred.
Authorities have said the students agreed to meet in an alleyway near Rancho High School to fight over a vape pen and wireless headphones that had been stolen from Lewis’ friend. Lewis died from his injuries six days later.
A homicide detective who investigated the case told the grand jury that cellphone and surveillance video showed Lewis taking off his sweatshirt and throwing a punch at one of the students, according to court transcripts made public in January. The suspects then pulled Lewis to the ground and began punching, kicking and stomping on him, the detective said.
A student and a resident in the area carried Lewis, who was badly beaten and unconscious, back to campus after the fight, according to the transcripts. School staff called 911 and tried to help him.
veryGood! (6883)
Related
- The Louvre will be renovated and the 'Mona Lisa' will have her own room
- US investigating power-assisted steering failure complaints in older Ram pickup trucks
- After singer David Daniels' guilty plea, the victim speaks out
- Man arrested in shooting death of 9-year-old in Chicago, police say
- Gen. Mark Milley's security detail and security clearance revoked, Pentagon says
- Senator Dianne Feinstein giving up power of attorney is raising questions. Here's what it means.
- The UK government moves asylum-seekers to a barge moored off southern England in a bid to cut costs
- Lecturers in the UK refuse to mark exams in labor dispute, leaving thousands unable to graduate
- Sam Taylor
- Two rivals claim to be in charge in Niger. One is detained and has been publicly silent for days
Ranking
- Most popular books of the week: See what topped USA TODAY's bestselling books list
- NYC plans to house migrants on an island in the East River
- With strike talk prevalent as UAW negotiates, labor expert weighs in
- Meghan Markle and Prince Harry Are Making Netflix Adaptation of the Book Meet Me at the Lake
- Are Instagram, Facebook and WhatsApp down? Meta says most issues resolved after outages
- MLB suspends Chicago’s Tim Anderson 6 games, Cleveland’s José Ramírez 3 for fighting
- Ex-Raiders cornerback Arnette says he wants to play in the NFL again after plea in Vegas gun case
- Horoscopes Today, August 7, 2023
Recommendation
Spooky or not? Some Choa Chu Kang residents say community garden resembles cemetery
FCC hands out historic fine to robocaller company over 5 billion auto warranty calls
Judge in Trump's classified docs case questions use of out-of-district grand jury
Once Colombia’s most-wanted drug lord, the kingpin known as Otoniel faces sentencing in US
'Most Whopper
Dangerous storms, tornadoes threaten more than 80 million on East Coast
Georgia's greatest obstacle in elusive college football three-peat might be itself
New national monument comes after more than a decade of advocacy by Native nations