Jonesboro, Ark., School Killer To Go Free

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Skywatch_NC
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Jonesboro, Ark., School Killer To Go Free

#1 Postby Skywatch_NC » Wed Aug 10, 2005 10:04 am

Jonesboro, Ark., School Killer To Go Free
Mitchell Turns 21

POSTED: 8:23 am EDT August 10, 2005

JONESBORO, Ark. -- Seven years after taking part in a schoolyard ambush where four students and a teacher were killed, Mitchell Johnson will walk out of a federal detention center Thursday.

His impending release has this northeast Arkansas town on edge, and many still question the fairness of releasing Johnson on his 21st birthday because of a now-closed loophole in the law.

Mitchell Wright, whose wife, Shannon, was killed in the attack, said he has tried to explain Johnson's release to his son, who was 2 when his mother died.

"He's told me, 'I don't think it's right he gets to go home to his momma and I only get to see my momma on videos,"' Wright said.

Student Whitney Irving was shot in the back, but survived. Although she has since graduated from high school, married and had a child, the attack remains a part of her everyday life.

"A lot of people are really scared to this very day and we have not forgotten anything," she said.

On March 24, 1998, Johnson, then 13, and Andrew Golden, then 11, stole high-powered rifles from Golden's grandfather. Dressed in camouflage, they waited in the woods behind the school until the lunch hour, when Golden ran into a hallway to trigger a fire alarm.

As classmates and teachers filed out of the buildings, Johnson and Golden opened fire. Children ducked or scrambled while teachers tried to herd pupils back into the building. Four students and Shannon Wright, an English teacher, were killed; 10 others were injured.

The Jonesboro shootings came amid a number of schoolyard assaults in which teenagers attacked their classmates. Thirteen died, along with two shooters, at Columbine, Colo., a year after Jonesboro. Luke Woodham killed two students in Pearl, Miss., in October 1997 after killing his mother, and Kip Kinkel killed two teenagers and wounded more than 20 at Springfield, Ore., after killing his parents in May 1998.

Woodham is in prison for life; Kinkel is serving nearly 112 years.

Because of a since-closed loophole in Arkansas' juvenile justice system, the state had no way to hold Johnson and Golden beyond their 18th birthdays. Federal prosecutors used weapons laws to keep the boys locked up until age 21. Golden is scheduled to be freed in 2007.

Dale Haas, the sheriff at the time of the shootings, questions whether justice has been served as Johnson walks free.

"How could anyone think they would be rehabilitated?" Haas asked.

With some residents also angry over the sentences, Craighead County Sheriff Jack McCann wants to offer protection to Johnson's mother, Gretchen Woodard, who still lives near the school where the shootings took place.

"I want to prepare her that, if he's coming back here, there are going to be some problems - to what extent I don't know," McCann said. "We are going to be very open with her about what could happen and do whatever we can to help them.

"Whether anybody agrees with it or not, he has served his sentence," McCann said.

Woodard has said that her son will not return to Arkansas when he is released from prison in Memphis, Tenn. She said he wants to become a minister and hinted he will move at least a day's drive from Jonesboro and enroll in college.

Woodard said her son dwells on what happened.

"He'd give anything. He'd give his life 100 times over to turn this thing back. The best thing, I really believe, the best thing to do is give him a chance," she told the Arkansas Democrat-Gazette. "Let him get out there and spread his wings and help other people."

http://www.wral.com/news/4832069/detail.html

Copyright 2005 by The Associated Press.
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#2 Postby Windsong » Wed Aug 10, 2005 12:00 pm

The real bad part is, this kid has every single right you and I have. He can vote, he can buy a gun, and if a cop stops him in a traffic stop, the cop will never find a record. No one would. He HAS no record.

This is a gross miscarriage of justice and it makes me sick.
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#3 Postby Dr. Jonah Rainwater » Wed Aug 10, 2005 5:57 pm

They might as well let him change his name.

I can't imagine how you could convince an 11 year old to plot and murder. Jonesboro was one of the most horrible because of how young the killers were.
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#4 Postby gtalum » Thu Aug 11, 2005 10:16 am

We live in a nation of laws. Unfortunately, sometimes that means the bad guys win the small battles. However, the key here is for Jonesboro law enforcement to follow this guy's every move and nab him the first time he so much as tiptoes over the line of legality.
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#5 Postby Windsong » Thu Aug 11, 2005 5:13 pm

that's just the point though. There is NO WAY to follow his every move. The article says he will not be moving back to AK and that he will enroll in a college and pursue becoming a Minister. His record will be expunged. HE CAN BUY A GUN, and there will be nothing on his record that even mentions the fact that he KILLED people. Where ever he goes, he has a clean slate. In a few years, he can even be a MINISTER at your church or mine and there would be no way to know his past.

Yes DR. They might as well change his name. He got off easy and he left 6 dead people in his wake all before finishing puberty. It never ceases to amaze me.
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#6 Postby TexasStooge » Fri Aug 12, 2005 7:31 am

I'm not gonna comment on that story.
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#7 Postby beachbum_al » Fri Aug 12, 2005 7:41 am

As a victim of crime involving someone dying I can only relate to the ones who are the victim that have been changed forever. I am sorry but I just don't have any sympathy for the killer. I know he was young but what child that age goes out and does something this traumatic and evil. I just don't understand. And what is not to say that just because he is older that he will not do it again.

I can relate partly to telling a young child that their love one's killer is out free and while they only get to remember their love one on tape, pictures, and stories. It is sad. Sadly the victims are the ones that have no rights. The criminal seems to have all of the rights.
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