Tag: school shooting

  • Leodoro sentenced, gets the max

    Leodoro sentenced, gets the max

    Roseburg teen gets maximum sentence:

    ROSEBURG – In an eight-minute hearing during which he said nothing, 15-year-old Vincent Wayne Leo- doro received the maximum sentence Friday for shooting a friend in the back at Roseburg High School in February.

    It wasn’t enough, said Yvonne Allison, the mother of the victim, Joe Monti, 16.

    Allison said the remorseless boy – who shot her son once and then shot him three more times after he had fallen in the crowded high school courtyard – should be sentenced as an adult for a crime that will affect her son for the rest of his life.

    Instead, Leodoro, who was 14 when he shot Monti, will remain in custody of the Oregon Youth Authority until age 25. Although he was convicted of crimes carrying long Measure 11 prison terms for adults – attempted murder and first-degree assault – the law does not apply to offenders younger than 15.

    Douglas County Juvenile Court Judge Robert Millikan said the law covering juvenile crime aims to punish and also to rehabilitate offenders. While in custody, Leodoro will be enrolled in education and counseling programs addressing his specific personality defects.

    Meanwhile, Joseph Monti could have lifelong damage from the shootings. Will he get help for his defects, paid for by the state? Remember when prison was for punishing criminals?

    And it seems like the “mutual friend” could have been the puppet master, if you will, behind the whole situation…

    Evidence in Leodoro’s two-day trial last week indicated the boy acted out of jealousy and fear.

    A mutual friend of Monti and Leodoro, who was investigated but not charged, reportedly told both Leodoro and Monti privately that each was threatening to harm the other’s family. Leodoro initially said he shot Monti because he felt he and his family were in danger from Monti’s alleged threats.

    Monti, who never attacked Leodoro, said he had heard nothing about the alleged role of the mutual friend until the trial. He said he knew Leodoro and the mutual friend less than a month before he was shot.

    Leodoro also told Roseburg police Detective Joseph Kaney that he and the mutual friend were angry with Monti because two girls they hung around with seemed smitten whenever Monti showed up.

    In a taped interview with Kaney, Leodoro said, “Every time they see Joe, they follow him. When he’s there, we’re like nothing.”

    Allison also called for prosecution of the boys’ mutual friend. Trial testimony indicated the boy learned Leodoro had the gun 15 minutes before the shooting but told no one at school and did not warn Monti.

    “I feel he should be as accountable as the person who shot him,” Allison said.

    Officials have said the investigation is not over yet.

  • Leodoro found guilty

    Leodoro found guilty

    Teen found guilty of RHS shooting:

    A Douglas County Juvenile Court Judge found Vincent Wayne Leodoro guilty of attempted murder this morning.

    The ruling came after brief closing statements by the defense and prosecution. Judge Robert Millikan ruled that Leodoro, 15, intentionally tried to kill Joseph Monti, 16, when the youth shot Monti four times in the back Feb. 23 on the Roseburg High School campus.

    “I think that Mr. Leodoro intended to kill the victim,” Millikan said, as the teen sat at the defense table, his gaze lowered.

    Leodoro was found responsible for attempted murder, first-degree assault and several weapons charges. Millikan said the boy had a strong grasp of weapons mechanics and must have understood the consequences of his action.

    Sentencing was scheduled for July 7. Leodoro could end up in custody until the age of 25.

    Here was the defense’s argument…

    In his defense closing, attorney Bruce Tower said the teen continually denied trying to kill Monti, saying he only meant to hurt him.

    So Leodoro shot Monti once, then as Monti lay on the ground Leodoro shot him three more times. Yet he was only trying to “hurt” him? So I guess Jack the Ripper was only trying to “scratch” his victims.

    During the interview with Leodoro, Kaney challenged Leodoro’s claim that he only intended to hurt Monti. When the detective asked Leodoro what he’d expect to happen to someone who’s shot, he replied, “Dies, I guess.”

    At that point in the interview, Leodoro began to sniffle, his voice wavering.
    “I screwed up,” he said. “I shouldn’t have done it.”

    Ya think?

  • Motive revealed in Roseburg trial

    Motive revealed in Roseburg trial

    Possible motives revealed in RHS shooting trial:

    Leodoro told the detective about threats Monti had allegedly made to hurt the younger teen’s family in the days preceding the shooting. Monti made the threats because he thought Leodoro was talking bad about him to some female students, Leodoro claimed.

    “When he talked about those threats, he would get a little emotional,” Kaney said.

    Outside the courtroom, during a brief recess, Monti denied having ever made such threats.

    “I never threatened his family in my life,” he said.

    Monti claims he’d heard from another student it was his family that had been threatened by Leodoro.

    At one point, Kaney said, Leodoro also said he’d given money to Monti to purchase some marijuana, but never got his hands on the drugs. Kaney said that appeared to exacerbate Leodoro’s animosity toward the other teen.

    Leodoro told Kaney in the taped interviews that in general he had not been a victim of bullying at the high school.

    All really good reasons to shoot someone. 🙄

  • More details from the Roseburg trial

    More details from the Roseburg trial

    RHS shooting trial begins: ‘I felt like I was gonna die’:

    Just some more details that weren’t in the last article…

    RHS student Leah Sheppard, 16, said she’d met with fellow students, including Monti and Leodoro, in a group in the cafeteria before first period, though she didn’t talk with the suspect.

    When the bell rang for first period, Sheppard said she, Monti and fellow student Kristina Sklenar, walked toward class talking and giggling. She was vaguely aware of Leodoro following them.

    When she heard the first shot, like every other student who testified, Sheppard said she thought it was a prank, someone setting off firecrackers.

    “I heard Joe screaming,” she said. “… I didn’t know he was serious and I just kept walking.”

    She continued toward the school’s Main Building, leaving Monti behind. When the final three shots rang out seconds later and panic ensued in the crowded courtyard, Sheppard realized something was terribly wrong.

    She instinctively took off running toward the parking lot, where she saw Leodoro. The teen, she said, reached into the pocket of his gray-hooded sweatshirt.

    “He showed me the gun,” she said, adding that at that point, “I ran back to Joe.”

    A Fremont Middle School student on the same bus as Leodoro that day said she overheard the suspect talking on a cell phone, saying, “I’ll meet you at school with the bullets.”

    Sklenar, 17, spoke of a conversation she had with Leodoro a week or two before the shooting.

    “(Leodoro) said ‘You better give me a hug because it’s my last day today,’” she testified. “He said ‘I’m going hunting.’”

    When Sklenar asked if he meant hunting for animals, Leodoro said “No.”

    “I just laughed it off,” Sklenar said. “I didn’t think he meant anything by it.”

    I can’t wait to see how the defense will play this off.

  • Roseburg trial starts

    Roseburg trial starts

    Girl describes Roseburg High shooting at trial:

    Apparently, the trial has started in the Roseburg High shooting in Oregon…

    ROSEBURG, Ore. (AP) — Joseph Monti unbuttoned his black shirt to reveal for a judge the damage he suffered in a shooting at Roseburg High School in February, and a female student testified that she saw the shooting unfold in the packed courtyard.

    Andrea Gingery, 16, said she was a few feet from Monti when she witnessed a boy behind him — Vincent Leodoro — pull a gun.

    Monti began screaming and collapsed after the first shot, Gingery said. Within three to four seconds, Leodoro stepped closer and fired three more shots into Monti’s back as he lay on the ground, she said.

    The testimony was given Tuesday as the prosecution neared the end of its case against Leodoro, who faces charges that could keep him in a state juvenile prison until he is 25 years old.

    Monti, 16, showed the judge the scars from four surgeries that followed the four gunshot wounds. Leodoro, sitting a few feet away, appeared uninterested by the display from his former friend.

    Roseburg police Detective Kent Grant testified that a 10-mm handgun was used to shoot Monti, and it has the same diameter bullet as the .40-caliber pistol that is popular among police agencies. Ann Marie Simmons, the deputy district attorney, said the weapon belonged to the boy’s stepfather.

    A search of Leodoro’s bedroom yielded dozens of bullets and a research paper on military weapons, sniper tactics and bullet-resistant vests, Douglas County sheriff’s Detective David Bartley testified.

    It seems like an open and shut case at this point, but these kinds of cases can be very unpredictable. We’ll just have to wait and see what happens.

  • Bartley pleads not guilty

    Bartley pleads not guilty

    Kenneth Bartley pleads not guilty in Campbell County school shootings:

    How does this make any sense?

    A 14-year-old boy on Friday pleaded innocent in the killing of a high school administrator and the wounding of two others in November.

    Kenneth Bartley stood quietly with his head down during an arraignment in Campbell County Criminal Court at Jacksboro. Defense attorney Mike Hatmaker told Judge Shayne Sexton that Bartley was pleading innocent to a seven-count indictment that included first-degree murder.

    He shot 3 people, killing one, in front of witnesses and he pleads not guilty? I smell an insanity defense coming.

  • Bartley indicted

    Bartley indicted

    Kenneth Bartley indicted in Campbell County school shootings:

    It’s been a while since we’ve had any news about the Campbell County High shooting, but yesterday a grand jury handed down an indictment against the 14-year-old shooter Kenny Bartley Jr…

    The indictment accuses Kenneth Bartley of first-degree murder in the shooting of Assistant Principal Ken Bruce after being called to the office at Campbell County Comprehensive High School.

    In the indictment he is also charged with another count of felony murder of Bruce while committing attempted murder on the other two men injured, Principal Gary Seale and Assistant Principal Jim Pierce.

    Bartley is charged as an adult, but not eligible for the death penalty.

  • Pine Middle prosecutor upset over sentence

    Prosecutor calls house arrest in Reno school shooting ‘crazy’:

    Washoe County (Nev.) District Attorney Richard Gammick had some things to say about the light sentence Pine Middle School shooter James Scott Newman received…

    Gammick said the sentence undermines efforts to keep guns out of schools.

    “It sends an absolutely terrible message,” he told The Associated Press.

    “Factually, this is a simple case. A kid takes a gun to school and shoots somebody he doesn’t even know and injures another kid and he gets put on house arrest? Give me a break,” he said.

    “House arrest was not even on my radar scope,” Gammick said.

    Gammick said his office has received a number of calls from parents concerned that Newman will end up at an area high schools next year.

    “We have been preaching anti-guns and no weapons in school in all facets of law enforcement and in the school districts, and then we get a slap on the wrist for what happened here. This is crazy,” he said.

    Of course, the criminal defense attorney sees it a different way…

    David Houston, Newman’s lawyer, said Gammick was ignoring the facts.

    Newman “was incarcerated for 2 1/2 months, so to suggest that he was being released with no consequences is absurd,” Houston said.

    “We’re talking about a boy who never had so much as a sleep-over away from his house,” he said.

    Houston said Newman made significant progress in counseling in past weeks, receiving therapy at least two times a week with a psychologist his parents hired.

    “The state’s own experts said he moved from being a high risk to a low risk during that period of time,” he said.

    This case has been a travesty of justice from the beginning. First, Newman was tried as a juvenile. Secondly, the parents are facing no charges because the gun was allegedly secured. And lastly, house arrest and community service for shooting two people is a joke.

    Mr. Gammick is absolutely right. This is crazy.

  • Pine Middle School shooter sentenced

    Teen Gets House Arrest in Nev. Shooting:

    RENO, Nev. — A 14-year-old boy who shot and injured two fellow middle school students was sentenced Friday to house arrest until he completes 200 hours of community service.

    Prosecutors had recommended James Scott Newman, who pleaded guilty to battery with a deadly weapon, be placed in a state juvenile facility.

    Washoe County Juvenile Court Master Janet Schmuck acknowledged she struggled with the sentence before she ordered to him to have electronic monitoring and 24-hour supervision at his parents home in Reno.

    “If it does not work to the court’s satisfaction, James will be committed,” Schmuck said. “But I want to give James and his family an opportunity to make it work.”

    Deputy District Attorney Jo Lee Wickes immediately appealed the sentence, saying it was not proper given the seriousness of the crime.

    He shot two people and all he gets is an ankle bracelet and community service. The judge is living up to her last name.

  • Pine Middle shooter to enter plea

    Pine school shooting suspect to enter plea:

    James Scott Newman, the 14-year-old gunman in the Pine Middle School shooting, has agreed to enter a plea this Friday and will be sentenced…

    David Houston, the boy’s lawyer, said this was the best outcome.

    “The family and James look forward to the opportunity to put his matter behind them by accepting responsibility for what he has done and ask the court for what they felt to be the appropriate penalty,” Houston said.

    “The family and James continue to extend their apologies to the young people injured in this event and their families,” Houston said.

    Since James is a juvenile, the details of the plea won’t be released until Friday.