Andrew Lester was scheduled to stand trial next week on charges of first-degree assault and armed criminal action in the shooting of the then-16-year-old, who survived and is now a freshman at Texas A&M, where he is a member of ROTC and the school’s marching band.

As part of a plea deal, Lester pleaded guilty to second-degree assault, a charge that Judge David Chamberlain said carries up to seven years behind bars. Lester, who will be sentenced on March 7, was hunched over as he was wheeled into the courtroom, his hands folded.

“While this marks a step toward accountability, true justice requires consequences that reflect the severity of his actions — anything less would be a failure to recognize the harm he has caused,” she said.

  • @over_clox
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    974 days ago

    I live by logic and reason, and a bit of gut instinct once in a while. Now let’s think about this for a whole 5 seconds…

    It’s not the person that knocks on your door or rings your doorbell that you should have to worry about, it’s the person that doesn’t knock or ring the bell.

    Duh. Some people really don’t need guns…

    • @Soup
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      544 days ago

      Have you considered: It was a black teenager and these people are fundamentally broken individuals who scream about toughness and are just about the softest little shitheel cowards you’ll ever meet?

      • @reddig33
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        254 days ago

        Many people in the US have that “fear of the other” drilled into them starting at a very young age. Whether it’s skin color, religion, nationality, or sexuality — relatives, religious leaders, and politicians create this unnecessary fear. Just look at the current administration’s words and actions for example. It’s sick and sad, and it creates irrational behavior like this.

        • @[email protected]
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          84 days ago

          Many people in the US have that “fear of the other” drilled into them starting at a very young age.

          You are so very right. I was born in the mid-70’s and I grew up in a rural area, lots and lots of low-income farmers outside of the valley, no minorities. There was a city to the west, and a notorious maximum security prison to the east. The news focused almost solely on the non-white people inhabiting both, and as a result I grew up absolutely terrified of those “others”, because the bad things was all I ever heard. I had no real contact with any minorities until I was an adult and had to get a job in the city. One morning driving in to that job, my car broke down a couple miles from where I worked, in a pretty run-down area. I had to walk the rest of the way to work. Not a soul bothered me, but that fear of the “other” was so strong that by the time I got to the office I was physically ill from it. Reactions and fears like this were the norm with the people I knew back then, and the media and those in power continue now with the propaganda that the “other” are to be feared and distrusted, because keeping us on edge and divided makes us easier to control.

        • @ByteJunk
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          104 days ago

          Also, doesn’t help that the guy is 86 years old. I have several people in the family around that age, and they’re totally unable to filter out all the garbage, the rage-bait and the fear that’s getting pushed down their throats.

          They genuinely live in terror, it’s so sad…

    • @robbinhood
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      114 days ago

      I generally support gun ownership, but responsible gun ownership is key. Safety training and explanations/workshops on your rights and where they end should be mandatory.

  • @TsarVul
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    43 days ago

    I didn’t know about this so I checked out the Wikipedia article. Wild shit, I tell you.

    Yarl sought help at three different homes before someone finally complied.[14] Neighbors had found him lying injured in the street and called police, who found him with at least two gunshot wounds to the head and arm.[13]

    The district attorney stated there was a “racial component” to the case.[3] Assistant prosecuting attorney Alexander Higginbotham clarified that “there is not a racial element to the legal charges that were filed”. Legal experts noted this was likely because a hate crime charge would have carried a lower maximum sentence.

    • @[email protected]
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      33 days ago

      Trial is always a gamble. The DA can have tons of evidence and one person on the jury will simply refuse to believe it. Or the jury might decide that the shooter deserves the worst possible penalty. Both sides want to know what they are getting.

  • @PattyMcB
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    -14 days ago

    I wish this hadn’t happened. The poor kid has to live with that horrific memory. I’m glad he’s living.

    I think some common sense should’ve been applied from the start. People like that need to not have guns, but they also need to feel secure enough not to want them.

    • @[email protected]OP
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      314 days ago

      Most of Canada manages to survive just fine without the need to shoot kids who knock on a wrong door.

      Maybe it’s just a you thing.

      • @[email protected]
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        114 days ago

        I’m more scared when people knock on the good door and it’s still mine, because it means I’ll have to do some social interaction

    • @grue
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      244 days ago

      GTFO with the victim-blaming bullshit. The perp’s ridiculous paranoid bigotry was 100% his own problem, nobody else’s.

    • @PattyMcB
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      73 days ago

      I wasn’t blaming the kid ffs. The homeowner is a piece of shit for shooting him. Jesus. Reading comprehension is your friend

    • partial_accumen
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      164 days ago

      but they also need to feel secure enough not to want them.

      I’m not willing to do what racist pieces of shit would require done to others to make racists not want guns.

      • @Limonene
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        184 days ago

        The only thing that needs to happen for people to “feel secure enough not to want” guns is for Fox News (et al) to stop spreading disinformation about the levels of violent crime. I see tons of ads falsely claiming that violent crime is through the roof, when it’s actually very low and decreasing.