San Diego Union-Tribune

MAN GETS PRISON; KILLED BROTHER WITH CROSSBOW

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A Northern California man who killed his brother by shooting him with a crossbow at a City Heights park was sentenced Thursday to 25 years to life in state prison.

Adam Thomas, now 22, was convicted by a San Diego jury of first-degree murder for the Aug. 9, 2021, killing of his 22-year-old brother Trenton Thomas.

Deputy District Attorney Christina Eastman told jurors Thomas took his brother to Central Avenue Mini Park, blindfolde­d him and shot him in the head.

The prosecutor described the killing as a premeditat­ed “execution” in which Thomas fled the scene immediatel­y after shooting his brother and dumped the crossbow in a canyon a few blocks away.

Thomas' defense attorney, Marc Carlos, told the jury his client had no motive to murder his brother and argued the killing was a “horrible accident.”

Carlos told jurors Thomas bought the crossbow as a birthday gift for his brother and was planning to give it to him in surprise fashion at the park.

While bringing the crossbow over to his brother, Thomas tripped and accidental­ly fired the weapon, then fled in a panic, the attorney said.

Thomas was arrested a few days later in Sacramento, where he and his family lived. Trenton Thomas was living in the San Diego area at the time of his death.

At his sentencing hearing, Thomas said, “I take full responsibi­lity for the death of my brother,” while maintainin­g the killing was unintentio­nal.

“I bought that crossbow, took it down there. I was stupid with the way I handled it and I left my brother,” he said.

Thomas' parents told San Diego Superior Court Judge Carlos Armour that they believed their son did not intend any harm toward his brother.

His father, Andrew Thomas, said what happened was “a tragic, unfortunat­e event rather than a deliberate act.” The parents said Thomas was previously offered a plea deal for voluntary manslaught­er but turned it down because he knew he was innocent.

Armour declined a defense request to reduce the conviction to second-degree murder, though the judge did strike a deadlyweap­on allegation that would have added one year to Thomas' sentence.

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