Scott Dyleski Teen Killer Murders Woman

Scott Dyleski

Scott Dyleski was sixteen years old when he murdered a woman. According to court documents Scott Dyleski would fatally stab Pamela Vitale after striking her with a rock and carving a symbol into her back. Dyleski would be sentenced to life in prison without the possibility of parole however due to Supreme Court rulings this teen killer would be eligible for parole in the future.

Scott Dyleski 2023 Information

Inmate NameDYLESKI, SCOTT EDGAR
CDCR NumberF46590
Age34
Admission Date10/31/2006
Current LocationCalifornia State Prison, Corcoran
Location LinkDirections
Parole Eligible Date (Month/Year)10/2029

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A former Lafayette resident originally sentenced to life without parole in the maniacal murder of his neighbor now has a shot at freedom in 2030, thanks to a new law that reduces life sentences for teens tried as adults.

Scott Dyleski, in Corcoran State Prison for the murder of Pamela Vitale, was given a reduced sentence of 25 years to life, in place of a prison term that gave him chance of parole. Dyleski’s reduced term, affirmed in an appellate court decision released Thursday, came after the passage of Senate Bill 394, which gives juveniles tried as adults and sentenced to life without parole a chance for eventual freedom.

Dyleski was 16 in 2005, when he broke into the home of his neighbors and stabbed to death Pamela Vitale, carving a symbol into her body and cutting a large wound into her stomach, according to prosecutors. During his trial the following year, prosecutors presented journal entries and eyewitness evidence that suggested Dyleski had fantasized about torturing and killing people.

In 2005, Vitale and her husband, prominent defense attorney Dan Horowitz, were refurbishing their home. Horowitz discovered his wife’s body and testified during trial. Contacted Friday, he said he lobbied against SB 394, but as a defense attorney understood its intent; he said he has seen cases where juvenile gang members were sentenced to life for things like sitting in a car during a drive-by shooting.

“I understand the sentiment behind that,” Horowitz said. “The trouble is they haven’t limited it, so you give people who enjoy torturing and murdering others the same rights as someone who didn’t hurt anyone and was just an aider and abettor.”

Proponents of the bill have pointed out that there is no guarantee of parole, and said the granting that possibility after 25 years would give juvenile offenders motivation to earn their freedom. They also cited studies saying juveniles’ minds are underdeveloped.

Lawmakers estimated there are roughly 300 juvenile offenders statewide eligible for sentence reductions. Many of them, including Scott Dyleski, were in the process of petitioning for re-sentencing under a 2014 state Supreme Court case that opened the door for juvenile offenders serving life without parole to be freed.

The sentence of 25 years to life is what Dyleski asked for at a court hearing last year at a re-sentencing petition. There, he took the stand and denied killing Vitale.

“I did not kill her,” Dyleski said in the June 2017 hearing. He then tearfully admitted to committing credit card fraud and said he dreamed of suicide, not murder, as a teen.

A judge firmly denied Scott Dyleskis petition the following month, pointing out the heinous nature of the crime and his refusal to accept responsibility. Dyleski appealed the decision, but when SB 394 came into effect — thereby reducing his sentence — the appeal became a moot point, appellate judges wrote in their decision.

Under the law, a parole board that denies suitability can set a new hearing as soon as three years down the line, or as long as 15 years, depending on the facts of the case.

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Scott Dyleski is currently incarcerated at Corcoran prison in California

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Scott Dyleski is serving a life sentence however is eligible for parole in 2029

Anthony Clark Teen Killer Murders 2 During Robbery

Anthony Clark

Anthony Clark was fourteen years old when he shot and killed two people during a robbery. According to court documents Clark arrange a meet with one of the victims in order to rob him. When the victim showed up with another person Anthony would shoot and kill both of them. Due to his age at the time of the double murder once he was convicted of the double murder this teen killer would be sentenced to sixty years in prison for each of the murders

Anthony Clark 2023 Information

Anthony Clark 2021
ID Photo
DC Number:C90133
Name:CLARK, ANTHONY
Race:WHITE
Sex:MALE
Birth Date:08/29/2000
Initial Receipt Date:11/01/2017
Current Facility:MARTIN C.I.
Current Custody:CLOSE
Current Release Date:04/01/2075

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A West Boynton teen who killed two men — shooting them each in the head and then going shopping at malls — was sentenced Friday to 60 years in prison.

Anthony Clark, now 17, pleaded guilty to two counts of second-degree murder in the deaths of two cousins, Ricky Miner, 23, of Boynton Beach, and Andrew Laudano 21, of West Boynton.

Clark was just 14 years old when he shot and killed them during a robbery committed with two accomplices.

“It was so horrific, I can’t even look at the crime-scene photos,” said Mary Lynn Hougen, holding a framed photograph of her son, Miner. “How could anyone do this to two human beings? How does this happen to a mom?”

Circuit Judge Laura Johnson agreed, “It’s senseless.”

Clark stood beside his attorney, Kai Li Aloe Fouts, while pleading guilty and didn’t make any statement in court. Clark must serve at least 25 years of the sentence, Johnson said.

Co-defendant Reed Albertson, 19, also is expected to resolve his charges with a guilty plea on Wednesday. The third assailant has not been arrested yet, prosecutor Andrew Slater told the court.

The victims were both found on April 7, 2015, with bullet wounds to the head in and near a car parked in the Melrose Park neighborhood off Lyons Road, west of Boynton Beach.

Hougen, who has four other children, said she at first wanted to die after the killing of her “kind, funny, charming … precious little boy.”

But she said she managed to go on, and during Friday’s hearing read her son’s Mother’s Day letter to her that he wrote while in the first grade.

Christian Laudano, younger brother of Andrew Laudano, couldn’t hold back his anger when given a chance to address the court.

“He had a kid, bro,” Laudano said. “He had something to live for. When you get out bro, karma is a mother. Just remember that.”

Sarah Bowers, mother of Andrew Laudano’s now 4-year-old son, lamented the absence of the man in her child’s life.

“Our son will never get to spend any more birthdays or holidays with his dad,” she said.

Prosecutor Slater said Clark gave a “full and complete” confession to the killings, as part of a negotiated plea deal with his attorney.

Clark was arrested eight days after the shootings at Palm Beach International Airport, as he tried to board a flight to St. Louis, according to an arrest report.

Deputies said they found witnesses who claimed Clark admitted wanting to rob Laudano. Investigators said they also learned Clark had a laser-equipped gun that he had allegedly stolen in a vehicle burglary, and there was evidence Clark had gone on a shopping spree at malls in Boynton and Wellington on the day of the killings

Clark told a detective he had dropped out of school and didn’t know how he was going to make money, according to the report. Clark also mentioned during the interview how he saw Laudano with a lot of cash and a gun. The prosecutor said Clark bought marijuana from Laudano in the past.

Investigators said Laudano’s Dodge Charger appeared to be rummaged through, and Laudano was missing a Michael Kors rose-gold colored watch and his iPhone 6, according to the report.

Detectives said Clark had the same watch when he was arrested.

Kelly Neal, Miner’s older sister, told the court she wanted Clark to receive a death sentence, which she recognized wasn’t possible under the law because of his age.

“Take no pity on this man,” she said. “He knew what he was doing.”

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Anthony Clark is currently incarcerated at the Martin Correctional Institute

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Anthony Clark is not scheduled for release until 2075

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Legends. That’s how the families of Andrew Laudano and Ricky Miner wanted everyone in a Palm Beach County courtroom Friday to remember them.

In the moments before Circuit Judge Laura Johnson sentenced the men’s 14-year-old killer to 60 years in prison for gunning them down in a 2015 west Boynton robbery, it was important for their families — especially Laudano’s brothers — to show Anthony Clark that not even his bullets could could break the love and admiration they had for the 21 and 23-year-old larger-than-life personalities who considered each other more family than best friends.

“This was their world, you’re just living in it,” Christian Laudano, Laudano’s younger brother, told Clark, now 17.

“Let him know,” said James Bell, another of Laudano’s brothers.

Andrew Laudano with his son, Andrew Laudano, Jr., shortly before his death. (Family photo)

Clark stared ahead expressionless through most of the commentary, even as the brothers’ grief manifested through dark wishes for what will happen to Clark when he gets to prison, or even worse, when he gets out.

It was Laudano’s money, according to Assistant State Attorney Andrew Slater’s in-court narrative of the case to Johnson Friday, that sparked Clark’s plan to rob and kill Laudano two years ago. The plan, which Slater said Clark hatched with an unnamed accomplice who hasn’t been indicted, was to set up Laudano to meet, then rob and kill both him and whoever happened to be with him at the time.

Clark told investigators that he and the unnamed accomplice used to buy marijuana from Laudano and targeted him because he saw he carried large sums of cash. Slater said Clark bought the murder weapon at school days before the killing, and Reed Albertson, who will be sentenced Wednesday, joined the plot days before it ultimately came to fruition on April 7, 2015 in the 900 Block of Talway Circle in the Melrose Place community west of Boynton Beach.

There, Slater said Clark told him, Albertson and the unnamed accomplice acted as lookouts while Clark shot both Laudano and Minor in the head as they sat in a Dodge Charger, then fired another bullet in Laudano’s head at the encouragement of the unnamed accomplice.

Investigators at the time of Clark’s arrest said the robbery got him $5,000, which they spent partially on a video game system and expensive sneakers he bought on a shopping spree at a mall with friends after he bragged about the killing.

As part of the 60-year plea deal, Clark will serve a mandatory minimum of 25 years in prison, but will be eligible for release after a review of his case then based on new state laws regarding sentencing for juvenile offenders.

Friday’s sentencing brought tears from the mother of Laudano’s 4-year-old son, who remembered the young father teaching his son how to walk only to have his life taken before he could be there for much more.

Ricky Minor with his girlfriend shortly before his death. (Family photo)

For Minor’s mother, Mary Lynn Rogan, the memories were of her son’s loving, protective nature. She told Johnson about how she’d gotten a call from her son’s middle school principal shortly after the Sept. 11, 2001 terrorist attacks. A group of bullies had beaten up three Pakistani girls in a school bathroom, and when Minor found out, his mother said the principal explained, he responded by personally walking each of the girls to their classes from that day on so that no one would hurt them.

In elementary school, he made a card out of construction paper as a school project for Mother’s Day and explained that he loved his mother because she treated him nice, was always there for him and always fed him — in that order.

“Is your mom special as mine?” Minor wrote in the short essay that Logan read aloud Friday, later adding: “Whenever I get hurt she always makes it better. She always keeps me safe. Don’t you wish you had a mom like mine?”

For Minor’s niece, Lexi “Lexx” Neal, every day brings with it memories of the love and life advice her uncle gave her. Chief among his pearls of wisdom: Keep going.

“He would always say that,” she said. “No matter what happens, whatever you go through, keep going.”

The words have been hard for her to remember at times, and she told Johnson in court Friday that her uncle’s death launched her into a deep depression that separated her from her family and friends, led her to stop wanting to go to school and inflicted emotional pain she still suffers from today.

There was no one in the courtroom for Clark, except for his defense attorney, Kai Li Fouts, who from the start of the case had tried her best to remind everyone both in and out of court that her client, after all, was and is a child.

Minor’s older sister, Kelly Neal, urged Johnson to “take no pity on this man.” And even after Laudano’s brothers’ words led deputies to ask them to leave the courtroom, they stood outside waiting for the sentencing hearing to end and said they weren’t sorry for anything they said.

Their sympathy, they said, had been lost at the sight of the pair of tears Clark had tattooed under his eye after the killings, a symbol made popular in prison culture to signify the number of people a gang member or prisoner has killed.

Christian Laudano said he believed that Clark killed his brother and Minor while playing the role of “gangster.” But the younger brother said he had personally watched Clark’s confession video and said he was “crying like a girl” and also had violated the so-called gangster code to which he ascribed by “snitching” to police about the plot in order to broker the deal.

“My brother, I couldn’t even give you words that could tell you how big a person he was,” Christian Laudano said. “He lived more life in 23 years than most people live in a whole lifetime

https://www.palmbeachpost.com/news/crime–law/double-murder-brings-year-sentence-for-teen-killer/JOwM8TJRHzFUNpIVm7vf0H/

Philip Chism Teen Killer Murders Teacher

Philip Chism Teen Killer

Philip Chism was fourteen years old when he sexually assaulted and murdered his teacher. According to court documents Philip Chism would follow the teacher into a washroom where he would sexually assault the twenty four year old woman before murdering the woman. Phillip Chism would steal her credit card and use it to buy movie tickets. Phillip Chism would attempt an insanity plea however the jury did not go for it and in the end this teen killer would be sentenced to life in prison with no chance of parole for forty years

Philip Chism 2023 Information

Philip Chism – Current Facility – Souza Baranowski Correctional

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Peggie and Tom Ritzer and their two remaining children have 38 years before they will have to face Philip Chism again.

They say that’s too soon.

In an emotionally charged day in Salem Superior Court, the Ritzers spoke about the loss of their daughter Colleen, killed at 24 years old at the hands of one of the students she taught.

Philip Chism, then 14, raped, murdered and robbed Ritzer in the bathroom of Danvers High School on Oct. 22, 2013, leaving her body posed in the woods just outside the school.

A jury in December found him guilty of first-degree murder with deliberate premeditation and extreme atrocity and cruelty. They rejected the defense’s argument that Philip Chism was insane when he killed Ritzer with a box cutter.

Judge David A. Lowy sentenced Philip Chism to life in prison, with the possibility of parole after 25 years on the murder charge — the maximum he could levy on that count. But he also gave the now 17-year-old boy a 40-year concurrent sentence on the charges or aggravated rape and armed robbery, meaning Chism will be 54 before he gets a chance at freedom.

“One cannot see and hear what this court has during the course of this case without feeling that the crashing waves of this tragedy will never wane,’’ Lowy said as he handed down the sentence. “No math will ever erase the reality that this crime was committed by a 14-year-old boy.’’

Back in October 2013, when Chism pulled his hoodie on and followed Ritzer into the girls’ bathroom, juveniles found guilty of first-degree murder were automatically sentenced to life without parole, just like adults.

But two months after Ritzer was buried, the Mass. Supreme Judicial Court, following a U.S. Supreme Court decision, made life without parole for juveniles

unconstitutional, and limited the number of years juveniles could be held without parole.

The Ritzers railed against the “disrespectful’’ decision the courts made.

“Colleen’s family, friends, students and those who admired her have been given a life sentence without parole, but not the individual who committed the heinous act,’’ Peggie Ritzer said after the sentence was announced. “This is wrong and unjust.’’

Her husband, Tom, added that a criminal like Philip Chism shouldn’t get a second chance. They plan on fighting for an amended law that would prevent other families from going through what they will have to.

Essex County District Attorney Jonathan Blodgett said the high court’s decision “redefined justice’’ for families of murder victims by prohibiting life without parole for juvenile killers.

“Often times, when courts make decisions, the impact of those decisions can seem very remote,’’ Blodgett said. “I want everyone to see the impact of that decision. This family, that has suffered beyond measure, cannot close the book on this case.’’

Prosecutors had asked for Philip Chism to serve at least 50 years before he was eligible for release — two consecutive life sentences for the murder, then the rape and robbery, each with parole eligibility after 25 years.

His defense, meanwhile, requested parole eligibility after 26 years, with Chism eligible for release before he turned 40.

It was an emotional morning, as friends and family of Colleen Ritzer spoke to the judge about their loss. Ever since her daughter was murdered more than two years ago, Peggie Ritzer can barely stand to take a picture of her remaining children. Instead of a trio, she’s left with two.

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Phillip Chism is currently incarcerated at the Souza Baranowski Correctional

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Phillip Chism is serving a life sentence with no chance of parole until 2056

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A Massachusetts judge sentenced a teenager convicted of raping and murdering his high school math teacher to serve at least 40 years in prison, and the victim’s father called the killer “pure evil.”

Philip Chism, 17, was convicted in December of killing Colleen Ritzer, a 24-year-old math teacher at his suburban Boston high school. The sentence of life in prison, with the possibility of release after 40 years, was less than the 50 years prosecutors had asked Essex County Superior Court Judge David Lowy to impose.

“When something terrible happens, people will often say, ‘It could always be worse,'” Lowy said. “It is difficult for this court to imagine what could be worse for an individual and family to endure than the brutal murder of Colleen Ritzer.”

Chism was a 14-year-old freshman who had just moved from Tennessee when he killed Ritzer, cutting her throat with a box cutter and using a recycling bin to dump her body.

“I will never forgive him. He is evil, pure evil,” father Tom Ritzer said. He was one of nine friends and family members of the victim who spoke at the sentencing.

Chism’s attorneys had asked the judge to make him eligible for parole when he turned 40

“Witnesses … testified that he was nice, respectful, kind,” said public defender Susan Oker. “So what happened? We stand here today not understanding.”

Chism’s mother expressed sympathy for the Ritzer family.

“Words can’t express the amount of pain and sorrow these past two and a half years have been,” Diana Chism said. “There is no one who has suffered more than the Ritzer family.”

Hours after murdering Ritzer, who had stayed late to help students, Chism was found wandering along a state highway carrying a bag containing Ritzer’s identification and the box cutter.

During the trial, defense attorneys did not deny that Chism had attacked Ritzer but contended he was not criminally responsible for his actions due to a long-undiagnosed severe mental illness that was aggravated by the move.

The trial was occasionally delayed by Chism, who was once observed beating his head on a floor, and at another point, refused to return to the courtroom, telling his lawyer he was “about to explode.

https://www.huffpost.com/entry/philip-chism-sentence_n_56d0787fe4b0871f60eb1ba5

Kinterie Kiatis Durden Teen Killer Murders 2 During Robbery

Kinterie Kiatis Durden

Kinterie Kiatis Durden was sixteen when he murdered two men in Georgia. According to court documents Kinterie Kiatis Durden answered an ad on Facebook regarding a dirt bike. When the two men showed up they would be shot and killed by Kinterie Kiatis Durden. According to police this teen killer was in the back seat of the truck driven by one of the men when he opened fire. The truck would flip over and Durden would climb out and take the bike with him. Kinterie Kiatis Durden would be found guilty on the two murders and faces a life sentence.

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A 16-year-old told two Middle Georgia men on Facebook that he was interested in buying a dirt bike they had for sale.

To finalize the deal, they drove to meet the teen in Walton County, where they were shot several times in the back of the head and robbed.

Kinterie Kiatis Durden, who is now 19, was convicted Wednesday of killing the two men in 2017, the Walton County District Attorney’s Office said in a news release. The two victims were 30-year-old Davoddren Harris and 26-year-old Cortez White.

Harris and White lived in Meriwether County and were trying to sell a Yamaha dirt bike on Facebook Marketplace. On May 22, Kinterie Kiatis Durden told the two he was interested in buying the bike and asked them to drive to his home in Social Circle, the release said.

The two men let Kinterie Kiatis Durden get into the back of their Toyota Tacoma, which was carrying the dirt bike, and they were driving along Clegg Farm Road, the release said. That’s when Durden shot Harris, who was driving, twice in the back of the head and White three times in the back of the head and once in his back.

The pickup truck, which was moving slowly at the time of the shooting, flipped over and landed right-side up, the release said. Kinterie Kiatis Durden then crawled out of the vehicle and rode away on the dirt bike.

Kinterie Kiatis Durden later showed off the motorcycle to his friends, claiming he bought it, the release said. He hid the bike in the woods that night, however.

He was arrested the next day and has remained in the county’s jail ever since.

Kinterie Kiatis Durden was found guilty of two counts of malice murder, felony murder, armed robbery, aggravated assault and possession of a firearm during the commission of a felony, the release said. His sentencing will be held at a later date.

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After a 16-year-old shot and killed two men in Walton County and stole their dirt bike, the next thing he did was ride it around and show off to his friends.

It would be his last action as a free man.

Kinterie Kiatis Durden, who is now 19, was sentenced Thursday to life in prison without the possibility of parole for the double malice murder. During his court appearance, which was done over Zoom, he appeared content.

“It’s all good,” he said, during his last address to Judge Samuel D. Ozburn before his sentencing.

In May 2017, Durden told the two victims that he was interested in buying the Yamaha dirt bike they posted for sale on Facebook. The sellers, 30-year-old Davoddren Harris and 26-year-old Cortez White, both of Meriwether County, drove to Durden’s home in Social Circle to finalize the deal

The two men let Durden get into the back of their Toyota Tacoma, which was carrying the dirt bike, and began driving along Glegg Farm Road, according to prosecutors.

Without warning, Durden shot Harris, who was driving, twice in the back of the head. He then turned the gun toward White, who was shot three times in the head and once in his back.https://12ab3b0f1f6d9db14cc9a88c9f219063.safeframe.googlesyndication.com/safeframe/1-0-37/html/container.html

The pickup truck, which was moving slowly at the time, flipped over and landed right-side up. Durden then crawled out of the vehicle and rode away on the dirt bike, leaving the two men to die.

After showing the bike off to his friends — and lying about purchasing it — he hid it in some nearby woods. He was arrested the next day.

At his trial, Durden testified that the double shooting was in self-defense. However, the judge said that was the seventh time his story changed.

“What bothers me about this case was when he was first interviewed, he denied even being there,” Ozburn said Wednesday before the sentencing. “He admitted in cross-examination that he had told at least six different tales, with another different one at trial.”

Former District Attorney Layla Zon said Durden texted his girlfriend minutes after the murder, bragging about the bike. She said he’s never shown any remorse.

“There was no sudden impulsion in this crime,” Zon said. “This was a premeditated crime, cold and calculated.”

In November 2019, Durden was convicted on all counts, including two counts of malice murder, felony murder, armed robbery, aggravated assault and other firearm-related charges.

RELATED: Georgia teen convicted of killing two in Facebook dirt bike scam

Since then, he’s had several issues while in custody in the Walton County jail, including a complaint that he made sexual statements and performed lewd acts in front of a corrections officer, the judge said. The officer testified about the incidents during the sentencing hearing.

Just before was announcing his sentence, Obsurn listed Durden’s lengthy juvenile record. It included breaking a student’s jaw once, stealing a firearm on multiple occasions and stealing motor vehicles.

“This is a very troubled young man, and I am deeply concerned with him as an individual,” he said. “I’m finding that he is irreparably corrupt.

To close out the hearing, Durden’s attorney filed a motion to appeal the verdict and sentence

Kinterie Kiatis Durden 2023 Information

MAJOR OFFENSE: MURDER
MOST RECENT INSTITUTION: VALDOSTA STATE PRISON
MAX POSSIBLE RELEASE DATE: LIFE, W/O PAROLE

Kinterie Kiatis Durden 2021

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Kinterie Kiatis Durden is currently incarcerated at the Valdosta State Prison

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Kinterie Kiatis Durden is serving life without parole

Timothy Chavers Teen Killer Murders Teenager

Timothy Chavers

Timothy Chavers was seventeen years old when he took part in a murder of another teenager. According to court document Timothy and two others lured the victim to a remote location under the pretense of buying drugs. The initial plan was to just to rob the youth however it quickly turned into a fatal shooting. This teen killer would be sentenced to life in prison without parole

Timothy Chavers 2023 Information

timothy chavers 2021 photos
ID Photo
DC Number:P46305
Name:CHAVERS, TIMOTHY P
Race:WHITE
Sex:MALE
Birth Date:01/22/1993
Initial Receipt Date:10/25/2011
Current Facility:WAKULLA C.I.
Current Custody:CLOSE
Current Release Date:SENTENCED TO LIFE

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Timothy Chavers, the man twice convicted of murdering a Fort Walton Beach teenager during a 2010 drug robbery, was re-sentenced Monday afternoon to life in prison without the possibility of parole.

Chavers, now 25 years old, is one of six people in Okaloosa County who were sentenced to life in prison as juveniles, and who were granted hearings to re-examine their sentences thanks to a 2014 ruling that said it wasn’t mandatory to sentence juveniles to life if they were convicted of first degree murder.

Chavers’ defense attorney, Todd Early, argued before Okaloosa County Circuit Judge William Stone that there were several mitigating factors that warranted a reduced sentence for Chavers. The minimum sentence Chavers could have received was 40 years in prison.

Instead, Stone re-sentenced him to life, possibly setting a precedent for the four remaining cases to be heard in the coming months.

Chavers, was 17 on March 4, 2010, when he and three other teens lured 17-year-old Christopher Pitcock to the corner of Oakland Circle and Lula Belle Lane in Fort Walton Beach under the pretense of buying marijuana from him. They actually planned to steal Pitcock’s marijuana, according to prosecutors.

During the meeting, Timothy fatally shot Pitcock in the side with a .357 Magnum as Pitcock sat in his Chevrolet Blazer.

Chavers and 16-year-olds Tyree Rashand Washington, Kyle Markeith Walling and Jonathan Lee Louviere were arrested in a matter of days. They were all charged with first degree murder.

Washington and Walling were convicted of first degree murder and sentenced to life in prison without parole. Louviere pleaded no contest to second degree murder as an accomplice and was sentenced to 15 years.

Walling had a hearing in November 2017, but his new sentence has not yet been determined. Washington’s hearing will be held in October.

Chavers was convicted of first degree murder and attempted robbery at his 2011 trial and was also given life in prison without parole. His conviction was overturned in 2013 when an appeals court found that his Miranda Rights were violated during his arrest and jury instructions given at his trial were inadequate.

Timothy Chavers was convicted again in 2014, but wasn’t given a new sentence pending his hearing after the 2014 juvenile sentencing ruling.

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Timothy Chavers is currently incarcerated at the Wakulla Correctional Institute

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Timothy Chavers is serving life without parole