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WSWS : News
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Prosecutors continue legal vendetta against 14-year-old Michigan
boy
April 18 trial set for Nathaniel Abraham on new assault charges
By Larry Roberts
25 February 2000
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Nathaniel Abraham, the 14-year-old Michigan boy convicted of
second degree murder last November, will face a new trial on assault
charges in connection with an alleged incident at the Children's
Village youth detention facility where he was imprisoned for two
years. At a pre-trial hearing on Tuesday, February 22, Oakland
County Probate Judge Eugene Moore set April 18 as the trial date
for Nathaniel and two other boysThomas Lundy, 16, and Quante
London, 15on assault and battery charges, stemming from
a scuffle on a basketball court at the detention facility.
On January 13 Abraham, one of the youngest persons ever to
be tried as an adult for murder in the US, was sentenced to detention
at a juvenile facility, the W.J. Maxey Boys Training School, where
he will likely remain until age 21, subject to periodic reviews
by the court.
The Oakland County Prosecutor's Office is pursuing the assault
charges even though the incident resulted in no injuries as part
of its efforts to portray Nathaniel as an incorrigible and violent
criminal. This is consistent with its efforts since Nathaniel's
arrest, at the age of 11, for the 1997 shooting death of 18-year-old
Ronnie Greene Jr., outside a Pontiac convenience store. Nathaniel,
who suffers from severe mental and emotional problems, was prosecuted
under a 1997 Michigan law that sets no minimum age for the prosecution
of juveniles as adults for serious and violent offenses.
At trial, defense lawyer Geoffrey Fieger said that Greene's
shooting was, at best, a case of reckless discharge of a firearm.
Testimony and evidence demonstrated the great improbability that
Nathaniel deliberately fired at Ronnie Greene. An autopsy report
concluded that the bullet which killed Greene entered through
the top of his head, most likely having deflected off a tree.
New evidence was also introduced at trial that the shot may have
come from a party being held behind the convenience store.
After a jury found Abraham guilty of second degree murder,
however, Judge Moore rejected the prosecution's request for a
so-called blended or delayed sentence, whereby Nathaniel would
have been held in juvenile detention until the age of 21, with
the possibility at that time of being sent to an adult prison
if the court ruled that he had not been rehabilitated. During
the sentencing hearing January 13 Moore also attacked the law
that was used to prosecute Nathaniel as fundamentally flawed
and urged the state legislature to reassess the statute.
The prosecutor's office was angered and frustrated over Judge
Moore's sentence and seized upon a fight on a basketball court
to press further charges against Nathaniel. When he filed the
charges in January, Oakland County Prosecutor David Gorcyca told
the media, We just cannot ignore every criminal act he may
commit until his sentence is over.
The assault charge followed a hearing held last month where
Nathaniel pled guilty to a breaking and entering charge that pre-dated
the shooting death of Ronnie Greene.
According to prosecutors the basketball court fight took place
on January 12, the day before his sentencing hearing on second-degree
murder charges. Nathaniel's attorneys have challenged the validity
of the charges and the motivation behind them.
Daniel Bagdade, said, one witness stated that Nathaniel was
trying to stop the fight, not join it. Nate was trying to
be a peacekeeper. He was trying to break this fight up.
He added, Scuffles at J Building in Children's Village are
probably quite common, due to the nature of the situation and
the nature of the kids who are there. I was always under the impression
that the overwhelming majority of them were handled internally.
Why Nate was charged, along with the other kids, you will have
to check with the prosecutor.
By filing the assault charges the prosecutors are seeking to
build up a case against any early release of Abraham from juvenile
detention and at the same time make an implicit criticism of the
sentence handed down by the judge. Moreover, the new charge makes
clear the course of action the prosecutors would have pursued
had they obtained the blended sentence they were seeking. They
would have seized on any pretext to convict Abraham of criminal
actions during his stay at the juvenile facility in order to compel
the judge to sentence him to adult prison.
See Also:
Michigan prosecutors bring
new charges against 14-year-old Nathaniel Abraham
[22 January 2000]
Michigan judge sentences 13-year-old
Nathaniel Abraham to juvenile facility
[14 January 2000]
13-year-old convicted of murder
in Michigan: Harsh truths about a repugnant verdict
[23 November 1999]
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