Jamaica Gleaner

10 years slashed from teen killer’s sentence

- Livern Barrett/Senior Gleaner Writer livern.barrett@gleanerjm.com

THE COURT of Appeal has cut 10 years off the 18-year prison sentence handed to a woman who, as a 15-year-old, used a knife to stab her six-year-old halfbrothe­r to death at their St Andrew home in a crime that shocked the nation.

Further, the court ordered that June 7, 2013 – the same date the teen was sentenced in the Home Circuit Court – should be regarded as the day she began serving her prison term.

Attorney Obika Gordon, who, along with his father, Linton, represente­d the woman, said that prison authoritie­s have indicated that based on her record, she is scheduled to be released in September. The woman’s name has not been released because she was a minor when the offence was committed.

Court records revealed that she pleaded guilty to manslaught­er in April 2013 and was sentenced to 18 years in prison for plunging a knife into the chest and neck of her six-year-old half-brother Howard Johnson Jr at their Jones Town home in 2011.

“He died as a result of a haemopneum­othorax (blood and air in the chest cavity) and external bleeding,”court records revealed.

That same day, in the presence of an attorney, the teen gave a statement to police investigat­ors indicating that the killing was “revenge for the way in which the boy’s mother (her stepmother) treated her”, prosecutor­s said.

But after entering her plea of guilty, the teen’s attorney at the time offered two other motives, including allegation­s that the sixyear-old boy found out that she was being sexually abused by a relative and taunted her about it. The other account was that the sixyear-old had a habit of biting his sister.

The Court of Appeal, in slashing the sentence, said that the trial judge wrongfully took into account “some aspects” of the prosecutio­n’s case. “He ought not to have done so,” the Appeal Court found. In addition, the court said that it does not appear that the judge used an “appropriat­e” starting point before arriving at the 18-year sentence.

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