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Thread: Delilah Evans Sentenced to LWOP for MI Murder of her mother

  1. #1
    Senior Member CnCP Addict one_two_bomb's Avatar
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    Delilah Evans Sentenced to LWOP for MI Murder of her mother

    Metro Detroit teen gets life without parole for stabbing her disabled mom 120 times, killing her

    MT. CLEMENS, Mich. (WXYZ) - A Clinton Township teenager is now heading to prison for the rest of her life – without the chance of parole -- after being found guilty but mentally ill in the stabbing death of her mother on Christmas day of 2016.

    Delilah Evans is 18 now. She was 17 at the time of the attack on her mom -- 45-year-old Sonia Riang.

    Macomb County Circuit Court Judge Richard Caretti didn’t mince words when issuing his sentence Thursday shortly before noon.

    “I can’t imagine how you could plunge a knife 120 times into your mother who raised and nurtured you. Even considering your severe mental health issue, this senseless crime is mind-boggling,” said Hon. Richard Caretti.

    Despite pleas from her attorney for a lesser sentence because of her mental illness and being a minor, the judge threw the book at her.

    Evans walked into the courtroom biting her lip.

    Her attorney brought forth an expert to talk about her mental state after she killed her mom more than a year ago.

    “She was hearing voices. She was responding to internal stimuli. She was seeing shadows. She was in bad shape psychologically,” said Dr. Steven Miller, Consulting Forensic Examiner and licensed psychologist.

    Dr. Miller told the court he upgraded her diagnosis to schizoaffective disorder – a combination of schizophrenia and bipolar disorder.

    He reminded the judge that he had testified during the trial that she should not be found guilty because of reason of insanity.

    On December 25, 2016, Evans stabbed her brother in the hand before stabbing her mother to death.

    It happened in their Clinton township apartment.

    Riang was disabled and used a wheelchair to get around.

    Even after Evans was arrested and charged with first degree premeditated murder, her siblings and aunt came to her defense.

    “Unfortunately, we weren’t able to get her any of the help she needed before the incident,” said her sister Roseanna Evans after the arrest.

    “Obviously, she has a mental illness. She’s young. She can’t comprehend. I wouldn’t even be able to comprehend if I was a 17-year-old in this situation that I’m in right now,” added Roseanna.

    “She doesn’t understand anything!” cried her aunt Kenitha Molden.

    The jury rejected an insanity plea on February 22 of 2018. The panel instead found Evans guilty but mentally ill.

    In court today for sentencing, Evans watched with little-to-no emotion -- squinting at times, shifting in her seat -- as the forensic examiner explained how putting her in the prison system would make treatment for her much more difficult.

    Her attorney asked for a minimum of 25-to-60 years in prison because she was a minor when she killed her mom and mentally ill.

    “I said, ‘Are you sorry that this happened as to what happened?’ and she said, ‘Yes.’ I said, ‘Will you tell the judge that you are sorry as to what happened?’ And she said, ‘Yes.’ And then I said, ‘Okay, what will you tell the judge?’ And she blanked out. So, judge, I hope you will not hold it against her if she is not going to be able to speak.”

    And when the time came for her statement before her sentencing, she seemed confused.

    “Yeah. No,” she faultered.

    The judge asked, “Is it yes, or is it no?”

    Evans responded, “No.”

    Then Judge Richard handed down his sentence of life in prison without parole.

    “I can’t imagine how you could plunge a knife 120 times into your mother who raised and nurtured you. Even considering your severe mental health issue, this senseless crime is mind-boggling,” he said.

    Evans showed virtually no reaction.

    After receiving the maximum sentence, Judge Caretti told Evans she does have the right to appeal.

    https://www.wxyz.com/news/clinton-to...without-parole

  2. #2
    Senior Member CnCP Addict one_two_bomb's Avatar
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    Hats off to this judge! He handed down the maximum sentence, LWOP, and did not let the killers gender, age, mental state, or wishes of the family affect his decision. He saw this crime for what it is, a premeditated murder of another human being.

    Michigan was the first state to abolish the death penalty, but we have mandatory life without parole for first degree murder and felony murder (felony murder is whenever someone is in the process of committing a felony and death results, similar to Texas' law of parties). Mandatory means no sentencing phase, no aggravating or mitigating factors or any of that garbage. Guilty of first degree or felony murder equals life without parole. However because she was a juvenile at the time, the judge has to consider a lesser sentence because of the supreme court ruling. I would much rather have a system like this, where all murderers are given mandatory LWOP, instead of the current death penalty laws in most states, which are a joke.

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    I thought that you could not give LWOP to a person under 18?

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    Senior Member CnCP Addict one_two_bomb's Avatar
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    No they can still get LWOP. It just can't be mandatory.

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    Okay, Thank you

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