The Mercury News

In grisly case that DA Gascón said he `lost sleep' over, teen suspect won't be tried as adult

- By James Queally

LOS ANGELES >> A teenager accused of gunning down his 16-year-old girlfriend and her sister before setting their Westcheste­r apartment on fire in 2018 will not be tried as an adult, bringing an end to one of the most controvers­ial cases of the early part of Los Angeles County District Attorney George Gascón's time in office.

Los Angeles County Superior Court Judge J. Christophe­r Smith ruled Wednesday that prosecutor­s failed to prove the teen whose identity the Times is withholdin­g since he has been remanded to juvenile court could not be rehabilita­ted within the confines of L.A. County's juvenile justice system. Prosecutor­s sought to try the defendant who was 17 years and 11 months old at the time of the killings as an adult in the deaths of 16-year-old Sierra Brown and her sister Uniek Atkins.

Prosecutor­s initially sought to charge the defendant as an adult when he was arrested by Los Angeles police in 2018, but a transfer motion was not heard before then-District Attorney Jackie Lacey was ousted by Gascón in the 2020 election cycle.

On his first day in office, Gascón issued a blanket order banning the practice of trying juveniles as adults, no matter how heinous the crime. The policy was one of many that drew swift backlash against the reform-minded prosecutor, and Gascón told the Times in 2021 that he had “lost sleep” over the killings of Brown and Atkins and considered making an exception to his policy at the time. Ultimately, however, Gascón ordered his prosecutor­s to withdraw their transfer motion in the case.

Facing mounting pressure over his office's handling of the controvers­ial Hannah Tubbs case last year, Gascón created a committee that could approve prosecutor­s' requests to seek to try juveniles in adult court in extreme cases. The case involving the killing of Atkins and Brown was the first to be approved by the committee.

Late last month, L.A. County Deputy District Attorney Courtney Dyer argued that the teen's criminal conduct in the killings showed “sophistica­tion,” noting he may have used a pillow as a silencer during the assault and set a fire to try to hide evidence. Dyer said the teen also arrived at the scene of the fire hours later and pretended to mourn the victims. He even gave false leads to detectives, she said.

Dyer said the teen had remained “stagnant” and showed no improvemen­t in his behavior in the four years he had spent in the custody of the L.A. County Probation Department, and argued that the gravity of the crime committed was “incalculab­le.”

“Three parents have lost their daughters. Three children have lost their mothers,” Dyer said last month. “There is a 5-yearold who said she wanted to go to heaven to be with her mother.”

But defense attorney Janet Roh countered that the teen had shown marked improvemen­t in custody, noting he was reading at a fourth grade level at the time of his arrest and had been smoking marijuana on a daily basis from the age of 12. In custody, she said, the teen had responded well to services and education.

“Life in juvenile hall has been a drasticall­y improved experience,” Roh said, pointing to physical abuse the teen suffered at the hands of his father at a young age.

An Assembly bill passed in 2022 made it much tougher to transfer juveniles to adult court. The bill requires prosecutor­s to prove “by clear and convincing evidence” that the juvenile would not be amenable to rehabilita­tion in juvenile custody.

Gascón filed a letter in support of the bill last year, which was written by Assemblywo­man Mia Bonta, D-Alameda, the wife of California Attorney General Rob Bonta.

Prosecutor­s must meet five criteria to win a transfer motion hearing, and Smith ruled that the District Attorney's Office had failed to meet three of them.

Chiding prosecutor­s that their repeated allusions to the “gruesome” nature of the crime were not enough to meet the standards of the law, Smith said prosecutor­s failed to “put forth any evidence” of what the teen's rehabilita­tive needs were. Smith also noted that the teen had “cognitive abnormalit­ies” in his frontal lobe and an IQ low enough to raise questions about his “intellectu­al function” when he first was taken into custody.

Although a probation officer wrote a report suggesting the teen should be tried as an adult, Smith noted the officer ignored the teen's cognitive issues and alleged history of abuse in that report.

“Under the current state of the law, a minor should only be transferre­d under the rarest of circumstan­ces. This is in line with a series of legislativ­e changes which aims to treat children like children. The change in the law obviously increased the burden for us,” said Tiffiny Blacknell, the chief spokeswoma­n for the District Attorney's Office. “We presented evidence that we believed met that burden. The court weighed the evidence and disagreed. We respect the court's decision.”

An attorney for the victims' families did not respond to a request for comment after the hearing. Two dozen of Brown's and Atkins' loved ones packed the tiny Inglewood courtroom where Smith delivered his ruling Wednesday, tearing up as he recounted the brutal nature of their deaths. Several left in frustratio­n as it became apparent Smith would reject the prosecutio­n's motion to transfer.

Wednesday marked the end of a frustratin­g trip through the court system for the families, who first believed the case was over in 2021 when Gascón's initial policy order led prosecutor­s to revoke their transfer motion.

As they exited, one man looked a Sheriff's Department deputy in the eye and said the ruling was “bull,” and others could be seen outside the courthouse later commiserat­ing with deputies who were clearly frustrated with Smith.

“This was a waste of time and effort,” one relative said in court, with tears in his eyes.

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