Four Teens Accused of Killing Las Vegas Student Plead Not Guilty
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Posted on: January 25, 2024, 07:27h.
Last updated on: January 25, 2024, 07:27h.
Almost half of the teenagers who allegedly beat and stomped on a defenseless 17-year-old Las Vegas boy entered not guilty pleas on Thursday.
Cases against four of the nine young defendants will head to trial, according to Las Vegas TV station KLAS.
They are Damien Hernandez, 18, Dontral Beaver, 16, Gianni Robinson, 17, and Treavion Randolph, 16. Each is charged with second-degree murder and conspiracy after a jury handed down indictments last week.
On Thursday, Clark County District Judge Tierra Jones scheduled April 1 as the trial date for Beaver and Robinson. Trial dates have yet to be set for Randolph and Hernandez.
The victim, Jonathan Lewis, was brutally attacked in an alley near Rancho High School on November 1, 2023.
A person contacted 911 after the boy suffered severe head injuries and a school nurse tried to perform cardiopulmonary resuscitation on him.
There is bleeding on his head, he has a bump on his head and [he was] scratched on his elbows,” the caller told authorities. “He’s bleeding from his nose, and his face is turning blue.”
He was rushed to a local hospital. Doctors tried to save his life and he was placed on life support at University Medical Center. But a week after the attack, he passed away.
An autopsy by the Clark County coroner’s office revealed he died from blunt force trauma. His death was ruled a homicide.
Self-Defense?
Lawyers representing the accused teens claim they were acting in self-defense.
Lewis hurled the first punch which started the brawl and another boy who sided with Lewis had a knife in his possession, the defendants’ legal team maintains.
There are five other juveniles also facing charges in the killing. Prosecutors want them tried as adults. A 10th suspect has yet to be arrested.
The fatal beating began over stolen wireless headphones and possibly a vape pen, according to KLAS. A mob of teens stole the items from a younger kid and threw them into a trash can, USA Today reported.
Lewis chose to defend his smaller friend and soon was attacked.
Victim Was a Hero
The victim’s father, Jonathan Lewis Sr., told USA Today, “Jonathan just wanted to protect his friend. He’s a hero.”
We all must be held accountable for our choices,” the father said in a statement to KLAS. “Actually recognizing why, at this age, our children chose violence, the root cause, the terror of constant resource conflict and dependence on a broken system and actually building our own self-regulated wealth and health is a huge part of justice for me as a father too.”
An online GoFundMe fundraiser for the victim and his family so far has raised $136,505.
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