Yuma Sun

Judge praises teen for progress since killings when he was 8

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ST. JOHNS, Ariz. — An Arizona judge and the family of a teenager who fatally shot two men in 2008, including his father, heaped praise on him Wednesday for the progress he’s made as his time on probation comes to an end.

Judge Monica Stauffer told the boy she knows the past nine years haven’t been easy but admired him for the way he’s handled it. She turned toward the phone in a small courtroom in St. Johns, where he was listening in, her eyes filling with tears.

“I’m real proud of you and you’re going to do great things,” she said. “So much of your life is still for you to live and enjoy.”

Authoritie­s were not specific about progress he’s made but said he’s shown remorse, learned to manage finances, has set goals for himself and has a good heart.

Wednesday marked the final hearing in the case that troubled police and prosecutor­s because the boy was 8 at the time. The criminal charges were resolved in juvenile court with the boy pleading guilty to negligent homicide in the death of 39-year-old Tim Romans, whom he called for from inside his home and shot with a .22-caliber single-shot rifle as Romans walked up to the door.

Prosecutor­s said acknowledg­ing legal responsibi­lity for the death of his father, 29-year-old Vincent Romero, would be too heavy of a burden for a boy to carry and dropped that charge. Romans rented a room in the two-story blue house that Romero shared with his new wife and son.

The boy thanked those who have listened to him and helped him identify what he needs to transition into adulthood Friday, sounding much older than the days when he showed up in the courtroom fidgety and looking nervously looking over at his family.

“I’m just very grateful to everyone in the case,” he said.

Other than a trio of probation violations in 2012, the boy hasn’t been in trouble. Stauffer said his life turned dramatical­ly with the involvemen­t of clinical psychologi­st Dr. Alan Lewis, who helped him mature, understand his value and that he could be known for his future, not his past.

The Associated Press is not identifyin­g the boy because of his age at the time of the crimes.

Stauffer credited the boy’s grandmothe­r, Liz Castillo, for ensuring the case moved along with the boy’s best interest in mind. Castillo sat in the front row of the small courtroom with her daughter and sister nearby, wiping tears from her eyes. She said the last nine years have been treacherou­s but was grateful for the considerat­ion put into the case.

She said Romero and Romans always would be in her family’s mind and hearts.

“We hoped and prayed we could get through this, and the time is here,” she said.

Castillo told Stauffer she’d hoped the county would examine juvenile proceeding­s so people who are appointed to represent children are more involved.

Romans urged changed, too. She listened as people in the courtroom thanked each other for involvemen­t in the case but wondered why there was little emphasis on the victims.

“Not once, ‘How are your girls? How’s everything going?’” she said as her voice cracked over the phone. “Take a look at the victims’ side as well. Tim was a great man, he was. It’s just sad that two lives were just overlooked.”

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