Albuquerque Journal

Youth pleads guilty in Clovis library shooting

Judge to decide among ‘realm of punishment­s’

- BY DAVID GRIEDER

CLOVIS — In an agreement quietly discussed last month and reached on paper Tuesday, Nathaniel Jouett pleaded guilty to 30 felony charges leveled against him for the deadly mass shooting at the Clovis-Carver Public Library.

Jouett, 17, was previously scheduled to be tried as an adult next year in a month-long trial in Roswell. Instead, defense attorney Stephen Taylor proposed last month the plea agreement, which bypasses a lengthy trial but maintains an effort to see that Jouett be considered for an amenabilit­y hearing prior to sentencing.

Punishment is far from settled, however. Jouett could face up to two life terms in prison plus 96 years; the minimum punishment would be probation.

The then-16 year-old was arrested Aug. 28, 2017, after he opened fire in the library across from the Curry County Courthouse, killing two librarians — Krissie Carter and Wanda Walters — and injuring four other individual­s, including a young boy and a circulatio­n assistant.

Jouett still faces a sentence ranging from probation to multiple terms of life in prison; it’s as if he proceeded with the trial in March and was convicted on all counts (including two first-degree murder charges), but without the additional time, expense and turmoil of those weeks in Chaves County.

“I was initially surprised but I was happy to know that Mr. Jouett was actually taking responsibi­lity for what he had done, not putting the victims through a trial,” District Attorney Andrea Reeb said on Tuesday.

“That obviously is a huge step and it costs a lot of money, and it costs a lot of travel time and heartache for everybody involved.

“I would commend him for that for sure. I’m very happy that this part of it can be set aside now and we can move forward to getting some type of resolution for victims and families.”

There’s still quite a process ahead; Reeb signed the plea agreement Tuesday, and it needs to be formalized in a plea setting later this month. In mid November, 5th Judicial District Judge James Hudson will hear a motion from Taylor challengin­g the state’s “serious youthful offender” statute in the hope of having Jouett qualify for a subsequent hearing to be considered for treatment rather than lengthy incarcerat­ion.

Those dates are subject to court availabili­ty but are expected to take at least one or two weeks; Reeb said it’s possible the next opening might not be until the period in March previously allocated for a jury trial. The “realm of punishment­s” Jouett faces are the same, Reeb said, and they occupy a wide range.

“Because he’s under the age of 18, (Jouett) faces anything from probation up to two life sentences for the murders, plus 96 years on top of that for the other charges,” she said. “So basically all ranges and sentences are open to the judge. He doesn’t have the mandatory life sentences.”

Reeb said she would sit down with victims before venturing a concrete recommenda­tion as to sentencing, but expected a large request.

“It goes without saying that taking the lives of somebody should be met with a life sentence for each,” she said. “I think the state will probably be asking for a pretty lengthy sentence.”

 ?? TONY BULLOCKS/THE EASTERN NM NEWS ?? In this Aug. 31, 2017, photo, Nathaniel Jouett, accused of fatally shooting two workers inside a public library and wounding four others, enters a courtroom in Clovis.
TONY BULLOCKS/THE EASTERN NM NEWS In this Aug. 31, 2017, photo, Nathaniel Jouett, accused of fatally shooting two workers inside a public library and wounding four others, enters a courtroom in Clovis.

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