-Caveat Lector-

11-Year-Old To Be Tried as Adult

By SHARON COHEN
.c The Associated Press

PONTIAC, Mich. (AP) - It is a crisp fall night and the shooter stands alone,
holding a .22-caliber rifle. He fires, fatally striking an 18-year-old man.
Then he flees.  Two days later, police arrest a suspect. But when they find
their man, it turns out he is a boy.

He is sitting in a sixth-grade classroom. It is Halloween and his face is
painted for a party. He is just 11. His name is Nathaniel Abraham.

And now, two years after his arrest, he is set to face trial in October as an
adult on murder charges - one of the youngest people ever to do so in the
United States. Conviction carries a possible sentence of life without parole.

The trial had been expected to start Tuesday, but the Michigan Court of
Appeals on Friday granted a delay of at least three weeks until witnesses are
available.

When Nathaniel faces a jury, it will have to decide whether he was a
cold-blooded sniper or a prankster whose errant shot went astray.

But this case is about more than one question, one boy and one tragedy. It
has stirred debate over whether young kids truly understand their legal
rights, why they commit violent crimes and when - and f - they should be
treated as adults.

Nathaniel has become a poster child for both sides. Some law enforcement
officials say he proves the need to get tough with kids who are a menace to
society. But Amnesty International chose his frightened face to illustrate
the cover of a 1998 report condemning America's justice system as being too
harsh on juveniles.

Nathaniel was no symbol, just another suspect when he was hauled into the
police station, still wearing his Halloween makeup. There would be no
returning to school that day.

The suspect was barely 4-foot-9 and weighed 65 pounds.

But anyone who remembers places such as Jonesboro, Ark., knows baby-faced
children and guns can be a lethal combination.

At age 11, Nathaniel was already well known to police. Though charged only
once with a break-in, he had been a suspect in nearly two dozen crimes,
including burglary, larceny, home invasion, arson, threatening classmates,
beating two teens with metal pipes and snatching a woman's purse at gunpoint.

His mother, Gloria, who worked nights as a lab technician, had tried
unsuccessfully to get him into a residential treatment program. Days before
his arrest, she found a gun in her basement and turned it in to police.

That didn't stop Nathaniel, according to court records that provide the
following account:

On Oct. 29, 1997, Nathaniel and a friend were firing shots near a garage with
a .22-caliber rifle. A neighbor ran out and a bullet whizzed past his head;
he yelled and the boys ran off.

Hours later, Nathaniel stood with the rifle as three young men walked out of
a store. Prosecutors say he was standing nearly 300 feet away when he fired
twice; the second bullet struck Ronnie Green Jr. in the head. He died hours
later.

Nathaniel told police he was aiming at trees across the street. But
prosecutors say he bragged to friends before and after, first that he was
going to shoot someone, then that he had actually done so.

But what Nathaniel said - and understood - during more than an hour of police
interrogation has been the subject of two years of court battles.

Police didn't tell the 11-year-old they wanted to talk with him about a fatal
shooting. Green's killing only came up after he and his mother waived their
rights and the boy was questioned without a lawyer.

Since then, his lawyers have maintained that Nathaniel, a slow learner with
the reasoning abilities of a 6-year-old and language skills of an 8-year-old,
could not have understood the Miranda warnings.

Last year, when his lawyer asked at a hearing whether he understood what it
meant when police told him he had the right to remain silent, Nathaniel
replied: ``Can't go nowhere.''

His mother, Gloria, also said she would not have allowed police to interview
her son had she known it was about a murder.

``They coerced him to talk and say different things,'' she said last year.
``I don't think he knew the severity of what was going on. I was scared
myself, and I'm an adult.''

The trial court judge threw out Nathaniel's statement admitting that he'd
fired the rifle, and said the boy didn't know the consequences of his words
or why he was being interrogated.

But the Michigan Court of Appeals, in a 2-1 decision, reinstated it, saying
Nathaniel's ``own words plainly indicated that he had an adequate
understanding of his right to counsel.'' The state Supreme Court refused to
hear the appeal.

Nathaniel's statement could be used by prosecutors.

And they had something else on their side: A new law.

Ask state Sen. William Van Regenmorter about juvenile crime, and he quickly
rattles off horror stories: the mother taunted by a teen accused of killing
her son; the widow who sat in court watching three boys smirk and joke as
they faced charges of killing her husband.

``Law enforcement officers tell me quite regularly that they find that
juveniles are much more cold-blooded, much more conscienceless than adults,''
he says.

In 1996, Van Regenmorter, who chairs the Senate judiciary committee, joined
other Michigan legislators in passing a new get-tough measure. Among other
things, it gives prosecutors authority to charge kids under 14 as adults for
certain serious crimes. There is no lower age limit.

Though the law had been on the books less than a year when Nathaniel was
arrested, Van Regenmorter isn't troubled by his age. He says the law gave
judges wide latitude so they can sentence very young kids as juveniles or
adults.

But he concedes children as young as Nathaniel aren't exactly what
legislators had in mind.

``We weren't really thinking there would be many 11-year-olds who would be
charged as adults,'' he says. ``But there are a few ... who sadly are so
incredibly dangerous there needs to be some way to protect the public.''

When Nathaniel first appeared in court in leg shackles, his eyes welled with
tears. His small frame was dwarfed in an oversized red prison jump suit, his
feet didn't touch the floor when he sat.

He looked like a scared child.

The decision to try him as an adult was based on two considerations, says
assistant Oakland County prosecutor Lisa Halushka.

First, the crime: Nathaniel, she says, boasted he was going to shoot someone,
broke into a home to steal a rifle - a charge the defense denies - then used
it in the shooting. ``He admits to being able to see people down there,'' she
says. ``He was only firing when there were people outside.''

Then, the boy: ``He had such a long list of police contacts,'' the prosecutor
adds, ``and most of them very heinous offenses.

If convicted, Nathaniel could be sentenced as a juvenile or an adult. Or the
judge could order a hybrid penalty, with a juvenile sentence reviewed
periodically, to assess behavior, and leaving open the possibility of an
adult sentence.

But Halushka says all the talk of Nathaniel and the law has overshadowed the
true victim.

``Something that is consistently forgotten,'' she says, ``is Ronnie Green is
dead and Nathaniel killed him.''

Today at age 13, Nathaniel is no longer the boy who barely peeked above the
witness box. He has the size, look and mannerisms of a teen. And that worries
his lawyer.

``All the heinous juvenile crimes committed in our country will cause
prospective jurors to look at Nate differently,'' says Daniel Bagdade, the
court-appointed lawyer.

Bagdade says Nathaniel has never strayed from his contention the shooting was
an accident. ``He's telling the truth,'' he says.

The lawyer plans to challenge claims Nathaniel targeted Green, with a witness
who will testify ``the rifle was in such poor condition, it could not be
aimed and shot properly, even by a professional.''

And Bagdade also intends to portray Nathaniel not as a terror, but a boy who
liked sports, played on a baseball team and was well-liked by teachers, some
of whom will testify on his behalf.

Since his arrest, Nathaniel has been held in a detention center for
juveniles; his mother and grandparents visit regularly.

``I like Nate,'' Bagdade says. ``I've developed a bond with him. To me, he's
an ordinary little boy, with the emphasis on little. That's not to say he
doesn't have significant problems. He does.''

``He understands the potential of what he faces,'' the lawyer adds. ``He's
very anxious to get this over with.''

DECLARATION & DISCLAIMER
==========
CTRL is a discussion and informational exchange list. Proselyzting propagandic
screeds are not allowed. Substance—not soapboxing!  These are sordid matters
and 'conspiracy theory', with its many half-truths, misdirections and outright
frauds is used politically  by different groups with major and minor effects
spread throughout the spectrum of time and thought. That being said, CTRL
gives no endorsement to the validity of posts, and always suggests to readers;
be wary of what you read. CTRL gives no credeence to Holocaust denial and
nazi's need not apply.

Let us please be civil and as always, Caveat Lector.
========================================================================
Archives Available at:
http://home.ease.lsoft.com/archives/CTRL.html

http:[EMAIL PROTECTED]/
========================================================================
To subscribe to Conspiracy Theory Research List[CTRL] send email:
SUBSCRIBE CTRL [to:] [EMAIL PROTECTED]

To UNsubscribe to Conspiracy Theory Research List[CTRL] send email:
SIGNOFF CTRL [to:] [EMAIL PROTECTED]

Om

Reply via email to