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Dancefloorhewa21
04-08-2009, 12:58 PM
By Stephanie Chen
CNN

(CNN) -- It began as horseplay, with two teenage stepbrothers chasing each other with blow guns and darts. But it soon escalated when one of the boys grabbed a knife.


Quantel Lotts is shown at age 12, two years before he committed the crime that sent him to prison for life.

1 of 3 The older teen, Michael Barton, 17, was dead by the time he reached the hospital. The younger boy, Quantel Lotts, 14, would eventually become one of Missouri's youngest lifers.

Lotts was sentenced in Missouri's St. Francois County Circuit Court in 2002 to life in prison without parole for first-degree murder in his stepbrother's stabbing death.

It made no difference that at the time of the deadly scuffle, Lotts was barely old enough to watch PG-13 movie and too young to drive, vote or buy beer.

"They locked me up and threw away the keys," Lotts, now 23, said from prison. "They took away all hope for the future."

Lotts is one of at least 73 U.S. inmates -- most of them minorities -- who were sentenced to spend the rest of their lives in prison for crimes committed when they were 13 or 14, according to the Equal Justice Initiative, a nonprofit organization in Alabama that defends indigent defendants and prisoners.

The 73 are just a fraction of the more than 2,000 offenders serving life sentences for crimes they committed as minors under the age of 18.

Across the country, most juvenile offenders and many adults are given a second chance. Charles Manson, convicted in seven notorious murders committed when he was 27, will be eligible for his 12th parole hearing in 2012. He's been denied parole 11 times. Even "Son of Sam" killer David Berkowitz, who confessed to killing six people in the 1970s when he was in his 20s, has had four parole hearings, though he has said he doesn't deserve parole and doesn't want it.

But Quantel Lotts has no hope for a parole hearing. At least not yet. See which states have sentenced minors to life without parole »

Lotts is part of a trend that has developed over the past two decades. Numerous studies have shown that In the 1970s and 1980s, minors were rarely given life sentences, let alone life without parole, experts said. By the early 1990s, according to the Department of Justice, an alarming spike in juvenile homicides spawned a nationwide crackdown, including a movement to try kids in adult courts.

Lifers by the Numbers
• 2,225: Inmates serving life without parole for crimes committed as minors
• 42: States that allow life without parole for minors
• 14: States that have no minimum age for life sentences
• 73: Documented cases of minors serving life without parole for crimes committed as 13-, 14-year-olds
• 44: States that passed laws between 1992 and 1997 making it easier try minors as adults

Sources: Human Rights Watch, Equal Justice Initiative, National Conference of State Legislatures, U.S. Department of Justice "Criminal court doesn't care they are kids," said Melissa Sickmund, chief of systems research at the National Center for Juvenile Justice in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania. "Once they are there, it's just another case."

Today, there are only a handful of states -- including Alaska, Colorado, Kansas, New Mexico and Oregon -- that prohibit sentencing minors to life without parole, according to the National Conference of State Legislatures.

Proponents of the strict sentencing laws said public safety should be top priority. They argued that judges give certain criminals, regardless of their age, life sentences because the crimes are so abhorrent.

"There are some people who are so fundamentally dangerous that they can't walk among us," said Jennifer Jenkins, who co-founded the National Organization for Victims of Juvenile Lifers. The Illinois-based group fights legislation that would remove sentences of life without parole.

In the past three years, attorneys at the Equal Justice Initiative have appealed cases involving 13- and 14-year-old offenders in state and federal court. Attorneys argue that the sentences are "cruel and unusual punishment" given the tender years of the offenders. Read the center's report

Only 19 states punish children under 14 with life sentences without parole, according to a study conducted by the center.

Last week, the state of Missouri dismissed Quantel Lotts' case in St. Francois County Circuit Court. The Equal Justice Initiative will challenge the decision in the Missouri Court of Appeals. A separate petition, filed in 2007, is pending in federal court in the Eastern District of Missouri.

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Equal Justice Initiative
Lotts remains in prison in Bonne Terre, Missouri, and he is hopeful. He has new dreams of going to college and maybe even becoming a lawyer.

"My family motivates me," he explained. "Because I want to be out there with them so I can never give up."

He wishes he could start over, but not at the beginning. He grew up in a crack house with a mother who used and sold drugs. In Lotts' case, court documents reveal that he was sexually abused as a child.

When child welfare officials took Lotts from his mother at the age of 8, they noted that he "smelled of urine and had badly decayed molars as well as numerous scars on his arms, legs and forehead."

"Quantel had a lot of anger because of all he has been through," said stepmother Tammy Lotts, 45, whose son Michael Barton was Lotts' victim.

At the time of the crime, Tammy Lotts said she left her children for several days with her husband to get high on crack cocaine.

"But I don't believe that Quantel did it," she added. "They took care of each other. They didn't see each other as stepbrothers; they considered them brothers."

Most young offenders serving life without parole were exposed to poverty, violence or drugs during childhood, the Equal Justice Initiative reported.

Some victims' families say that's exactly why the juveniles should stay locked up.

"They will come back to my community and your community and repeat," said Harriet Salerno, president of Crime Victims United of California, a group trying to block the passage of laws that would ease sentencing for juveniles.

She founded the victim's group after her daughter, a pre-medical student, was murdered at the University of the Pacific in Stockton, California in the 1979. "Many of them have dysfunctional homes, and the crimes will escalate because there is no place to put them."

Two cases where juvenile offenders got life without parole didn't even involve murder.

Antonio Nunez was 14 years old when he committed a crime that gave him life without parole. The crime was an armed kidnapping that occurred in 2001. He spent his childhood in a gang-ridden neighborhood in South Central Los Angeles, California. He was shot in the stomach multiple times while riding his bike at age 13. See stories of other inmates who were sentenced to life in prison without parole »

In Florida, Joe Sullivan, who case will be heard soon by the U.S. Supreme Court, was sentenced to life without parole for 1989 rape of an elderly woman. He was 13 at the time of the crime and is mentally disabled.

In 2005, groups that opposed life sentences without parole for young people, began to gain traction after the U.S. Supreme Court abolished the death penalty for crimes committed by 16 and 17 year olds in the landmark case Roper v. Simmons.

A year later, Colorado abolished life without parole for minors who commit crimes. At the federal level, Rep. Robert C. Scott, D-Virginia, will introduce legislation this year to give youthful offenders the option of parole. In California, Democratic Sen. Leland Yee has proposed a law that grants young offenders a chance at parole after ten years.

"Children aren't just little adults, and it's starting to resonate with people," said Ashley Nellis, an analyst at the Sentencing Project, a research organization tracking sentencing patterns. "There has been a general momentum of changing juvenile law in the last few years."

Nearly a decade later, Lotts, now a grown man, still cries himself to sleep over the loss of his stepbrother. To ease the pain, he reads novels or listens to the tunes of R&B group Dru Hill.


One sleepless night in prison, Lotts found himself reading the book "Lightning" by Dean Koontz. The novel, about time travel, has become one of his favorites. He often thinks about what it would be like to turn back time.

"This would have never happened," he said. "My brother would be here today."



I think the most interesting part is the fact that Manson is eligable for parole and these kids aren't. I tried to cut this down but its an interesting read.

Forca Barca
04-08-2009, 01:02 PM
Imagine if Dewey Cox was given life for cutting his brother in half?

Dancefloorhewa21
04-08-2009, 01:05 PM
Whos that? I just realized this shoulda gone in current events ... sorry Eleni :scared

J. Martin
04-08-2009, 01:09 PM
wow. sad all many levels

J. Martin
04-08-2009, 01:10 PM
Imagine if Dewey Cox was given life for cutting his brother in half?

lol, I thought of that movie right away when I read this

Forca Barca
04-08-2009, 01:10 PM
Whos that? I just realized this shoulda gone in current events ... sorry Eleni :scared

It's a movie LOL

http://www.notasdecine.es/wp-content/uploads/2008/10/dewey-cox_poster.jpg

J. Martin
04-08-2009, 01:11 PM
Whos that? I just realized this shoulda gone in current events ... sorry Eleni :scared

Title character from the movie "Walk Hard: The Dewey Cox Story"

kid accidentally cuts his older brother in half while play fighting, then goes on to become the greatest musicla artist in history

Dancefloorhewa21
04-08-2009, 01:12 PM
o aklsdaj;sdkahsdhas

This is what I think. Not that I condone murder or dont think people should pay for their crimes. But shouldnt the severity of this be taken into account. Like hes 14 he picks up a knife and stabs someone, that one fatal wound ends it all. Hes still 14, most kids dont think rational but I think the punishment should be different say if he stabbed the person MULTIPLE TIMES.
I think its fucked that Charles Manson, who will never be released, is still giving the option for parole.

bobby regan
04-08-2009, 01:22 PM
This story is crazy..... esp after reading about what background the kid had growing up. I mean at 14 you have somewhat of a head on your shoulders but at no way can you think at an adult level... The kid obviously has horrible issues to deal with from his past and alot of pent up anger im sure..... He prob got so mad he was in a blind rage and before he knew it commited this terrible mistake..... He should pay for his crimes esp since a life is lost..... but now two lives are lost...his brother who he did this too and his own

Very sad:yourcrazy

JenniFa
04-08-2009, 01:30 PM
i dunno.. we have been seeing a growing number of kids and teenagers are killing. In one way it sends a message that if you you kill, you will be sentenced as an adult. In another sense, these kids are young and dumb. Maybe they should be like 20 years off the bat.

But isnt it true, when you been in for so long, what good are you to society coming out? You CANT get a job? like what can you do after that?

Dancefloorhewa21
04-08-2009, 01:34 PM
You go back to commiting crime.

Droppin$$
04-08-2009, 01:45 PM
if you kill someone.. then you have a screw loose no matter how old you are, so this crime deserves punishment for sure.... but your right, if even manson is "eligible" for parole.. then so should this kid.

Man i did alot of crazy things at that age, ... but i was never capable of hurting anyone other than myself... so this is tricky. I guess i always thought that its either in ya or its not, i guess the question is can people really learn how to control their tempers.

ShaE
04-13-2009, 10:47 AM
"They locked me up and threw away the keys," Lotts, now 23, said from prison. "They took away all hope for the future."

nah, I'm pretty sure you did that kiddo.

sadelb
04-13-2009, 01:48 PM
What ever happened to the 9 year old who shot his father a few months ago? Is he getting jail time for that. 9 is way to young for jail in my opinion. He needs rehabilitation. 14 on the other hand is different.