4 teens accused of throwing a rock off an overpass that killed a man may be sentenced as adults

CNNWire
Wednesday, July 24, 2019
Judge rejects juvenile sentence for I-75 rock throwing suspects
Trevor Gray, Mark Sekelsky, Alexzander Miller and Mikadyn Payne of Clio, Michigan, all pleaded guilty in the 2017 death of Kenneth White.

FLINT, Mich. -- Four Michigan teens who pleaded guilty to throwing a rock off a highway overpass that killed a man may be sentenced as adults, according to CNN affiliate WJRT.

The teens could head to prison after Genesee County Circuit Court Judge Joseph Farah rejected a motion to send the group to a juvenile detention center, the news station reported.

According to WJRT, the teens will either go to prison, head to trial or seek a new deal for sentencing. They have until August 20 to decide if they want to withdraw their guilty pleas to manslaughter, the news station reported.

Trevor Gray, Mark Sekelsky, Alexzander Miller and Mikadyn Payne of Clio, Michigan, all pleaded guilty in the 2017 death of Kenneth White.

The four juveniles and another teen had been throwing rocks from a highway overpass on October 18, 2017, when one of them struck White.

White, 32, was riding in the passenger side of a van on his way home from work just north of Flint, Michigan, when the 6-pound rock crashed through the windshield, hitting him in the chest and face.

"The injuries are horrific. ... I gasped out (when I saw them)" Genesee County Prosecutor David Leyton said during the teens' trial in 2017.

All five teens were charged with second-degree murder but only four of them pleaded guilty to manslaughter, according to WJRT. The fifth suspect, 19-year-old Kyle Anger, pleaded guilty to second-degree murder, the news station reported. He was over 18 when the crime happened and will be sentenced to prison at a later date, WJRT reported.

White's father said his son's death was the most difficult thing he ever had to go through. "There's no words to describe it," Kenneth White Sr., told CNN affiliate WNEM after the teens were arraigned. "I've buried my mother, my father, and my oldest brother in the last four years and this is the hardest thing I've ever done in my life."

Leyton said he didn't think the boys intended to kill anyone when they threw the rocks.

"I don't think they said, 'OK, we're going to kill Kenneth White when he comes hurtling down the road," Leyton said. "But I do think they said, 'We are going to throw a rock down at the next car that goes by and try to hit it.'"

Now, the teens must decide whether to keep their pleas and serve time in adult jail or seek new sentencing deals.

Attorney Mike Manley, who is defending Payne, said the judge's decision sends the case "back to the drawing board," WJRT reported.

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