Brett Pearson Teen Killer Murders Mother

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Brett Pearson was a seventeen year old from Oregon who would fatally shoot his mother. According to court documents Brett Pearson would fatally shoot his mother and shoot his father who thankfully survived the brutal attack. Brett Pearson would admit to the double shooting and attempted to blame the murder on his drug addiction. Regardless this teen killer would be sentenced to life in prison with no chance of parole for forty years

Brett Pearson 2023 Information

Can not locate Brett Pearson in the Oregon Department Of Corrections. Due to his age he may be housed in a Juvenile Prison where results are not made public

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In an exclusive jailhouse interview with Fox 12, 17-year-old murder suspect Brett Pearson said he was on meth at the time of the shooting that killed his mother and injured his father.

“None of it was supposed to happen,” Pearson said from the Marion County Jail. “I should still be sitting at home with both my parents eating dinner. I should still wake up every morning in my bed going to school, getting my education. I should see my girlfriend tomorrow morning at 11 o’clock and spending the day with her, making her dinner.”

Pearson broke down crying repeatedly during the interview Friday.

Police found the body of his mother, Michelle Pearson, 44, at their home on Ventura Loop in Keizer at 11:30 p.m. Wednesday. Her husband, 57-year-old Bill Pearson, was also suffering from serious gunshot injuries.

He remains hospitalized and is expected to survive. Police said the bullet that killed Michelle Pearson struck her neck and traveled down to her chest.

“Regardless of being under the influence, it’s still a decision I made,” Brett Pearson said Friday. “It’s still something I did. It’s still something that was very wrong and should never have happened.”

Video: Teen murder suspect says from jail, ‘none of it was supposed to happen’Raw VideoFull jailhouse interview with 17-year-old murder suspect Brett Pearson

Pearson admitted shooting at his father, but claimed his friend, Robert Miller II, 17, shot his mother. Miller was also arrested and is facing murder charges.

Police have not confirmed who fired the shots.

Pearson said he and Miller had planned out the shooting for some time, while they were on meth.

Pearson said he had a great relationship with his parents growing up, and said it was the drugs that made him do it.

“I want people to know that I am sorry for what I did, not because I got caught, not because I’m sitting here in this garment, not because you’re in front of me,” Pearson told Fox 12’s Andrew Padula. “But because I’m truly sorry that I let myself make the choices I made and that I got so far gone that I decided to try to take somebody’s life, including my own parents.”

Miller and Pearson will both be tried as adults. They made their first appearance in court Friday and are being held without bail.

https://www.kptv.com/news/teen-murder-suspect-accused-of-killing-mother-i-was-on-meth/article_48527945-3756-5f69-9f47-8d3b2065a156.html

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Brett Pearson is currently in the juvenile division of the Oregon Corrections

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Brett Pearson is serving a life sentence however is eligible for parole after 21 years

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A Keizer man convicted of murdering his mother and attempting to kill his father as a teenager filed a civil suit claiming his life sentence in prison is unconstitutional. 

“My sentence is cruel and unusual,” Brett Pearson wrote in a post-conviction petition filed in Marion County. 

He also claimed his attorney failed to argue that his sentence was unconstitutional. If he had, Pearson said, he would’ve been sentenced as a juvenile and might be serving a shorter sentence. 

Pearson and his best friend Robert Daniel Miller II were both 17 when they conspired to kill Pearson’s parents. 

According to court records, the friends were using methamphetamine and had been planning the murders for weeks.

Investigators said they were high on meth when Miller shot Wilfred “Bill” Pearson multiple times while he slept. Michelle Pearson was shot in her torso. Brett Pearson fired at least two more shots at his father and grabbed his mother’s purse before fleeing the home with Miller.  

His father survived. His mother didn’t. 

Keizer police arrested Pearson less than an hour after responding to a 911 call at the Pearsons’ Keizer home. Miller was later arrested at a Salem Motel 6.

Keizer men sentenced for mother’s murder

The pair had planned to sell possessions and move to Mexico. According to court records, Pearson promised to pay Miller in exchange for killing his parents. 

Despite being minors, Pearson and Miller were charged with Measure 11 offenses, requiring them to be tried as adults. 

Prosecutors described Pearson, then a student at the Downtown Learning Center in Salem, as a remorseless, master manipulator who convinced Miller to kill his parents because he thought his mother was a “bitch.”

Pearson’s and Miller’s families requested shorter sentences. Pearson’s sister said her brother was helpful and wholeheartedly empathetic. Since Pearson stopped doing methamphetamine, he’d shown more compassion, said his attorney John Storkel.

Both pleaded guilty to aggravated murder, attempted murder and conspiracy to commit murder in 2015 and were sentenced to life in prison with the possibility of parole after 40 years. 

They were placed in the custody of the Oregon Youth Authority, where they awaited transfer to adult prison once they were old enough.  

Now 21 and imprisoned at the MacLaren Youth Correctional Facility in Woodburn, Pearson petitioned the court to order a reversal of his conviction and sentences, expunge his record and release him from custody.

His previous attempts to overturn his conviction were unsuccessful. Pearson and his attorney filed a brief with the Oregon Court of Appeals claiming his sentence was unconstitutional because he was a juvenile at the time of his crime. 

According to court records, it was his first time making such a claim. He argued for a shorter sentence during his criminal trial but did not suggest the 40-year term was unconstitutional.

In May, the Oregon Court of Appeals upheld his sentence. In its opinion, the appeals court stated that only mandatory life sentences without parole for those who committed their crimes while under the age of 18 were considered cruel and unusual. 

Pearson filed his post-conviction petition on Thursday. A hearing date has not yet been scheduled. 

Pearson will remain at the MacLaren until he is transferred to adult prison. He can remain in Oregon Youth Authority custody until he is 25. 

Dana Barker Teen Killer Murders Stepmother

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Dana Barker was seventeen years old when she fatally shot her stepmother. According to court documents Dana Barker would use a stolen car and a stolen gun, would cut the phone line in Brenda Barker’s home before entering the home. A fight ensued and Dana Barker would shoot Brenda Barker who would die from her injuries almost two weeks later. Dana Barker would be convicted and sentenced to life without parole. This teen killer is still appealing her sentence

Dana Barker 2023 Information

dana barker 2021 photos

Gender: Female

Race: White

Height: 5 ft 5 in

Weight: 185 lbs

Hair Color: Brown

Eye Color: Brown



OK DOC#: 233887Birth Date: 4/29/1976


Current Facility: MABEL BASSETT CORRECTIONAL CENTER, MCLOU

Reception Date: 5/4/1995

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Dana Barker made a lot of bad decisions when she was a teenager.

She and her friends once packed 15 people like circus clowns into a 2-door Nissan Sentra — a few of them rode in the trunk. They got sloppy drunk and went swimming in the deep, dark waters of Lake Eufaula at night.

She dropped out of high school, made thousands of dollars in unauthorized charges on her dad’s credit cards and ran away from home.

And in January 1994 — when she was just 17 years old — Barker shot her former stepmother Brenda Barker three times and left her to die.

Barker had rubber gloves, a stolen handgun and a rented car, according to court records. She cut the phone lines before knocking on the front door of Brenda Barker’s house in Okmulgee. A struggle ensued.

Brenda Barker’s two sons later found her lying in a pool of blood in the kitchen. She died 13 days later in the hospital.

Now 42, Barker has spent the past 25 years in prison for the murder. She’s serving life without parole.

She lives at Mabel Bassett Correctional Center, a mostly grey cluster of buildings ringed with razor wire in Pottawatomie County.

Barker has long, straight hair that falls to the middle of her back and a gap between her front teeth that gives her an expressive look when she talks.

Today, Barker says she knows what she did was wrong and she takes responsibility for her actions. She also believes she deserves a second chance.

“I should have gone to prison,” she said. “I did something horrible, but I don’t know that I should have given up the rest of my life.”

In recent rulings, the U.S. Supreme Court has recognized that research over the past 20 years shows the human brain is still developing in adolescents, making them less culpable for their actions. The regions of the human brain that manage decision making, aggression and impulse control are still forming during adolescence.  The Supreme Court has also recognized that adolescents are more susceptible to peer pressure, and are less able to consider future negative consequences of their actions. These same differences mean adolescents have a greater capacity for rehabilitation.

Two U.S Supreme Court decisions and subsequent state appellate court decisions have held that most people serving without parole for crimes committed as juveniles in Oklahoma are entitled to new sentencing trials that take their youth and potential for rehabilitation into account.

Barker now hopes for a new sentencing hearing that could give her a second chance at freedom.

When she was 17, Barker says she was a troubled, angry teenager who had suffered years severe physical and sexual abuse at the hands of her late father, Joe Barker.

“There was never an escape,” she said. “No matter how hard I tried, no matter what I did to break free, I couldn’t break free from my dad.”

She claims her father threatened to kill her unless she killed his ex-wife for him and that he groomed and manipulated her over a period of two years to commit the crime.

Joe and Brenda Barker were involved in a contentious fight over custody of their 9-year old son—Barker’s little brother.

She says Joe Barker told her that her little brother was being molested—something she now believes was a lie.

“Now I think he just didn’t want to pay child support,” she said.

Police investigated Joe Barker’s involvement in Brenda Barker’s murder, but they couldn’t find much hard evidence to link him to the crime.

Former Okmulgee County District Attorney Tom Giulioli remembers Dana Barker’s case well. He wouldn’t say whether he thought she should be released from prison.

But he continues to believe that Barker had very little remorse about the crime.

“She had a very cold personality,” he said. “She never showed any emotion.”

Barker said she was intimidated by Giuloli and the legal proceedings, much of which she didn’t understand as a 17 year old. Her court-appointed attorney told her to be quiet and reserved in court.

“I don’t think that’s a fair assessment. I’d like to know what his definition of remorse is,” she said. “I don’t know what these people want from you sometimes.”

Outside of Barker’s testimony, there was little to show her father’s involvement in the crime, Giulioli said. Since Joe Barker wasn’t present at the crime scene, there wasn’t enough independent corroboration of her story to file charges, he said.

“We spent considerable time trying to link the ex-husband to the crime, but we weren’t able to do so,” he said.

Joe Barker was never charged in connection with Brenda Barker’s death. He died in 2010.

Several family members said that Joe Barker was abusive to his entire family and that Barker was frequently singled out for the worst treatment, according to a pre-sentencing investigation report from 1995.

In an interview, Barker’s mother Mary Rine said Joe Barker was sadistic and controlling for the duration of their marriage. He beat her and sexually assaulted her, she said.

Joe Barker was fond of rare beef for dinner. He once pressed Rine’s hand against the heating element of an electric stove when she overcooked his steak, she said.

“He said ‘now that’s what you call rare,’” Rine said.

Joe Barker worked as a prison guard at Jackie Brannon Correctional Center in McAlester.

Strangers — particularly women —found Joe Barker charming, Rine said. He married and divorced at least six times.

“I don’t know if he was a psychopath, a sociopath or all the paths, but if you met him, you’d say he was the nicest man you’d ever want to meet,” she said.

There is also documentation of multiple reports of Joe Barker to Child Protective Services, according to Dana Barker’s court file.

“Back in those days, DHS just took you back home,” Barker said. “I couldn’t get away from him. I had to go to prison before I was free.”

And yet, she maintained contact with her father until his death. He visited her in prison and deposited money in her commissary account. He became her sole financial provider in prison.

“It’s an ugly situation. There’s not a good explanation for it at the end of the day,” Barker said. “He was still my dad and as bad as he was, there was still some good in him.”

Brenda’s Barker’s daughter Kerry Whitley was also just 17 when her mother was murdered. After Brenda Barker’s death, Whitley raised her brothers, who were ages 9 and 15 in 1994.

She and her siblings declined an interview request.

In 1995, Whitley told a probation and parole investigator that she believed Joe Barker was the “mastermind” behind her mother’s murder. She also said that she and her siblings thought Barker should spend the rest of her life in prison, according to court records.

“I’ve become a ‘parent’ of my two brothers,” Whitley said in the report. “My youngest brother has problems sometimes dealing with the fact that his mom is gone and I stay up with him if he’s crying on just wants to talk about it.”

In prison, Barker took a faith and character class in prison where the instructor encouraged her to write a letter to Brenda Barker’s children, but she decided against it. 

“I think the best thing I can do is stay away,” she said.

The last time Barker saw her little brother, it was in an Okmulgee County courtroom. He told her that he hated her.

“If it would be important, I would say that I’m sorry but I don’t know that that’s enough,” she said. “They’ve gone 25 years without their mother. You can’t fix that.”

https://www.readfrontier.org/stories/still-waiting-convicted-of-murder-as-a-teenager-dana-barker-now-hopes-for-freedom/

Dana Barker FAQ

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Dana Barker is currently incarcerated at the Mabel Bassett Correctional Center

Dana Barker Release Date

Dana Barker is serving a life without parole sentence

Shelton Jackson Teen Killer Murders Man During Robbery

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Shelton Jackson was a seventeen year old from Jacksonville Florida who would murder a man during a robbery. According to court documents Shelton Jackson and his brother Larry along with Anthony and Bobby Smith would kidnap Thomas C. Maynard. Maynard would be brought to an ATM where he was forced to make a withdrawal. Thomas Maynard was then brought to a remote location where Shelton Jackson would fatally shoot him in the head. Shelton Jackson would be convicted of the murder and robbery and would be sentenced to life without parole. This teen killer is currently going through a resentencing process in hopes he may one day leave prison

Shelton Jackson 2023 Information

DC Number:117512
Name:JACKSON, SHELTON
Race:BLACK
Sex:MALE
Birth Date:10/02/1972
Initial Receipt Date:07/19/1990
Current Facility:OUT OF DEPT. CUSTODY BY COURT ORDER
Current Custody:CLOSE
Current Release Date:SENTENCED TO LIFE

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Shelton Jackson has been serving a life sentence since July 13, 1990, for his role in robbing and killing a Jacksonville man begging for his life, execution-style.

He was about three months shy of 18 when he was sentenced for shooting 31-year-old Thomas C. Maynard.

Now 48, he faces a Jacksonville judge soon in a hearing that could result in less time behind bars. A Thursday-night A&E Network episode looks into the brutal case following a U.S. Supreme Court ruling against life-without-parole sentences for juveniles.

The 9 p.m. show, titled “Kid Behind Bars: Life or Parole,” details Maynard’s murder after he was kidnapped and robbed. Along with interviews with police and Jackson’s family, viewers will also hear from Maynard’s widow, Leesa. She vehemently opposes any resentencing. 

“I’m a total believer that if you do the crime, you do the time,” Leesa Maynard states in the program. “… He is a convicted murderer and the truth should stand.”

Provided by the State Attorney’s Office, the original 1990 arrest report on Maynard’s Jan. 26 death on Hollybrook Avenue said the victim was found face-up in front of a pumping station with two bullet wounds, his wallet and wedding ring gone.

“An examination of the body does reveal at least one gunshot to the back of the head,” the report said.

Maynard’s wife told detectives he had gone to the Publix supermarket on 103rd Street at 8:45 p.m. to get some cash from an ATM machine to buy formula for their week-old baby. He never returned. 

Investigators learned that his stolen bank card had been used about 10:30 p.m. at an ATM at a Normandy Boulevard Publix with $260 taken. They also found his Ford Mustang on Jan. 29 off Moncrief Road.

A witness then reported seeing two men and a woman she recognized in the car outside an apartment on Moncrief, the report said. Officers went to the woman’s apartment on Jan. 30 and found a television that had been inside Maynard’s Mustang and brought her and another woman in for questioning.

Both women admitted knowledge about the murder. One said she had ridden in the Mustang with her two brothers, Anthony and Bobby Smith, plus boyfriend Larry Jackson. She also said her boyfriend admitted that his brother, Shelton Jackson, shot Maynard, the report said. Then Anthony Smith took another shot. 

Ironically, Shelton and Larry Jackson walked into the Sheriff’s Office as the women were being interviewed, asking to see their sisters who had been picked up by police. They were arrested on scene.

The report details how the Jackson and Smith brothers kidnapped Maynard, then the four forced him to go to the Normandy Boulevard ATM and take out money. Maynard was then taken 7 miles away to Hollybrook Avenue. Shelton Jackson said they made Maynard lie on the ground while Anthony Smith took his watch, wallet and wedding ring. Then Shelton Jackson said he fired one shot into the victim’s head.

“According to Shelton Jackson, the victim begged him not to kill him and not to shoot him again,” the report said. “Jackson then stated that he fired once again into the ground to make the victim be quiet, at which time Anthony Smith told him to give him the weapon and fired another shot into the victim’s head, which appeared to have killed him.”

Shelton Jackson, only 17 when he was arrested on charges of murder, armed robbery and kidnapping, has filed appeals and motions multiple times since his sentencing to life in prison, court records show. Since the Supreme Court ruling, he has been moved back to the Duval County jail with a status hearing set for Sept. 20 in Duval Circuit Court, records show. 

Anthony Lamar Smith, now 50, was 19 when he was sentenced to life in prison, state Department of Corrections records show. His brother, Bobby Smith, was 20 when he was sentenced to 25 years and released in 2002. Larry Jackson was 26 when he was sentenced to 35 years and released in 2014.

Jacksonville has had its share of sentencing hearings to review earlier life terms for then-juveniles.

In 1999 then-15 year old Joshua Phillips was tried as an adult in the 1998 murder of 8-year-old Southside neighbor Maddie Clifton, then found guilty of first-degree murder and sentenced to life in prison without parole. Per the Supreme Court’s ruling that juveniles cannot automatically be sent to prison for life, he received a new sentencing hearing in late 2017 but again was sentenced to life.

In 1993 Eugene Edwards, then 16, was sentenced to life when he and four other teens, the oldest 18, robbed and killed Jacksonville corrections officer Tammy Jo Johnson.  After the Supreme Court ruling, Edwards’ sentenced was dropped in 2018 from life to 45 years, with credit for time he’s already served.

And right now, Aiden Fucci, 14, is charged as an adult with murder in the May 9 stabbing death of 13-year-old classmate Tristyn Bailey in Northwest St. Johns County.

https://www.jacksonville.com/story/news/courts/2021/08/22/jacksonville-teen-got-life-1990-murder-now-subject-a-e-episode/8163166002/

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Shelton Jackson is currently out of the Florida Prison System as he appeals his sentence

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Shelton Jackson is currently serving a life sentence however is in the process of resentencing

Devonte Brown Teen Killer Murders Brother And Sister

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Devonte Brown was sixteen years old when a breakup led to him murdering a brother and a sister in Ohio. According to court documents Devonte Brown was upset that Joselyn Brown had broken up with him and the teen killer reacted by stabbing her and her fourteen year old brother to death. Devonte Brown would also attack the teen’s mother. Devonte Brown would be sentenced to life in prison without parole for the double murder however he would take his own life in 2021

Devonte Brown 2023 Information

devonte brown 2021

Number A727400

DOB 01/28/1999

Gender Male

Race Black

Admission Date 07/28/2016

Institution Mansfield Correctional Institution

Status RELEASED – Death

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Devonte Brown, 17, a teen charged with killing his girlfriend and her brother, has been sentenced to life in prison without parole.

It was a difficult day for all involved, but will hopefully give two families a chance to move on.

Brown’s sentencing concludes a year-long nightmare for the family of Joselyn and Johnny Jones. Back in August of 2015, 16-year-old Joselyn and 14-year-old Johnny Jones were fatally stabbed in what prosecutors say was an act of rage after a teenage breakup.

On Thursday, the Honorable Judge Ian English heard from Joselyn and Johnny’s mother Josie Thomas, who was also attacked by Brown, but survived.

“Everything was taken from me in the matter of minutes, my kids, home, car, finances, and trust,” said Thomas.

Brown’s mother was also seen in the courtroom.

Brown, who was seen wiping tears from his face throughout the hearing, made a statement before learning his fate.

“I wish I would have understood how bad I would have hurt so may people, including myself,” said Brown.

The judge, however, wasn’t sympathetic towards the defendant. He said Johnny victimized Joselyn in the past, a reason for handing down the maximum sentence. It was a prayer answered for the victim’s family.

“This is a blessing right here, you know, I just said amen after he said that sentence. I think this is truly God working here,” said Thomas.

Brown’s attorney says the case is far from over, because his client will appeal due to a lot of discussion and a supreme court case that questions whether a teen should receive a life sentence.

https://www.wtol.com/article/text/news/teen-sentenced-to-life-without-parole-for-killing-girlfriend-her-brother/512-73ab3ca5-a4bf-4b5d-adcb-d7a5f2a347ed

Devonte Brown Death

A 22-year-old Mansfield Correctional Institution inmate’s death Saturday night is being investigated as an apparent suicide, JoEllen Smith, spokesman for the Ohio Department of Rehabilitation and Corrections, confirmed Monday.

 Devonte Brown was admitted to the Ohio penal system on July 28, 2016, on charges of aggravated murder, attempted murder, rape, failure to comply and kidnapping.

Brown committed the crimes in Lucas County. He was sentenced to life in prison, according to the ODRC online offender search website.

Investigator Bob Ball with the Richland County Coroner’s Office said Brown’s body will be taken for autopsy as is state law.

Staff Lt. Craig S. Cvetan, public affairs commander with the Ohio State Highway Patrol, said the general offense report had not been uploaded and approved yet, but he would provide the report when it became available.

https://www.mansfieldnewsjournal.com/story/news/2021/02/08/manci-death-being-investigated-apparent-suicide/4436524001/

Devonte Brown FAQ

Devonte Brown Suicide

Devonte Brown would commit suicide in 2021

Victor Salinas-Corona Teen Killer Murders Baby

Victor Salinas Corona teen killer

Victor Salinas-Corona was seventeen years old from Zion Illinois when he murdered his five month old son. According to court documents Victor Salinas-Corona would slam the child’s head against the metal bars on his crib when he would not stop crying. This teen killer would be sentenced to twenty three years in prison. As you can see from the mugshots below Victor Salinas-Corona appearance has drastically changed in the last seven years and chances are he is portraying himself as a hardcore gang member instead of a baby killer

Victor Salinas-Corona 2023 Information

Victor Salinas Corona 2021 photos
Parent Institution:DIXON CORRECTIONAL CENTER
Offender Status:IN CUSTODY
Location:DIXON
Admission Date:10/28/2014
Projected Parole Date:02/25/2036
Last Paroled Date:
Projected Discharge Date:02/25/2039

Victor Salinas-Corona More News

A man who was 17 when his infant son died in Zion last year was sentenced Monday to 23 years in prison for the boy’s murder.

Victor Salinas-Corona gave a tearful statement in a Lake County courtroom before his sentence was announced, saying he loved his son Ayden and doesn’t know why he harmed the boy.

Authorities said Victor Salinas-Corona, now 18, previously pleaded guilty to slamming the 5-month-old boy’s head into the metal rails in his crib, killing him instantly, in February 2013. They said the young father was frustrated because the child would not stop crying.

The child’s mother, Aurora Escamilla, pleaded guilty to misdemeanor child endangerment.

Dozens of people wrote letters to the court seeking leniency for Salinas-Corona, and several people, mainly family members, gave impact statements in court Monday. Relatives believe he suffered psychological damage when he was attacked by a group of people at the age of 15, and they said he was overwhelmed by being a father at such a young age.

Prosecutors sought 20 to 30 years in prison for Salinas-Corona.

https://www.chicagotribune.com/news/breaking/chi-zion-father-prison-fatal-child-abuse-20141020-story.html

Victor Salinas-Corona Other News

An 18-year-old north suburban man was sentenced to 23 years in prison Monday after pleading guilty earlier this year to murdering his five-month-old son.

Victor Salinas-Corona, of Zion, faced between 20 and 30 years in exchange for his guilty plea to first-degree murder under a negotiated deal between prosecutors and defense attorney that was approved by Judge Mark Levitt in July.

After a lengthy hearing Monday afternoon, Levitt handed down the 23-year sentence, which must be served in full at 100 percent.

Assistant State’s Attorney Jim Newman had asked for a sentence at or near the 30-year cap, while defense attorney Scott Gordon had requested the minimum 20-year-sentence.

“We respect the judge’s decision. He listened carefully to both sides,” said Newman, who prosecuted the case along with Assistant State’s Attorney Matt DeMartini.

The child, Ayden Salinas, died as a result of injuries suffered during the night of Feb. 27 and the early morning of Feb. 28, 2013.

The baby died of “abusive head trauma” according to autopsy reports, Newman said were found to be consistent with accounts that the child’s head was struck against a crib.

Newman said at Monday’s hearing that Salinas-Corona had a “support network” including family living in the same building that could have helped take care of the baby, but instead turned to lethal violence after being frustrated by the child’s crying.

Defense attorney Scott Gordon noted that Salinas-Corona, who was 17 at the time of the murder, had himself been the victim of a violent crime when he was attacked by a group of men in 2010, and offered that potential trauma as mitigation in the sentencing hearing.

The baby’s mother, Aurora Escamilla, 20, of Beach Park, pleaded guilty earlier this year to a misdemeanor child endangerment charge and was fined court costs in her case. She also spent time in Lake County Jail prior to her sentencing.

Escamilla was present when the child was killed, but was not a participant in the beating and cooperated with authorities, according to Newman and her defense attorney, Tom Briscoe.

Salinas-Corona has been held in Lake County Jail in lieu of a $2 million bond, and will now be transferred to an Illinois Department of Corrections facility in the near future.

https://www.nbcchicago.com/news/local/zion-man-sentenced-to-23-years-in-murder-of-infant-son/62776/

Victor Salinas-Corona FAQ

Victor Salinas-Corona Now

Victor Salinas-Corona is currently incarcerated at the Dixon Correctional Center

Victor Salinas-Corona Release Date

Victor Salinas-Corona is scheduled for release in 2036