High School

Hunter High shooter gets juvenile detention for killing 2 students

“It appears that what happened today was that there was a bridge, there was a meeting of the minds, a plea bargain if you will, to keep the case in juvenile court — but to have him admit the charges and not proceed with his self-defense argument,” Skordas said.

The prosecution would have to argue why it wasn’t self-defense, and Skordas said perhaps prosecutors didn’t want to risk losing the case altogether.

“There seems to be a recognition by the state that he had at least had an arguable claim to self-defense, this bullying that had happened to him, and some recognition that there may have been some merit to that,” he said.

Community rallies around families of Hunter High teens killed, injured in shooting

The teen will now go to juvenile detention and is expected to be released as a 21-year-old adult. When he is released, the deaths of the two boys will not be something people can easily search in his past.

“These are juvenile adjudications,” Skordas said. “So, he won’t have an adult record. He won’t have a felony on his record.”

Skordas said juvenile proceedings are generally not open to the public, so it would be hard for an employer or certain schools or careers to find that record because it’ll be private and confidential.

In admitting to the two charges of manslaughter and one charge of discharge of a firearm, all other charges were dismissed in court Monday.

Hunter High focuses on violence prevention, healing following deadly shooting

Two days later, on Dec. 7, the family of Tivani Lopati, one of the victims in the shooting, released a statement via their family spokesperson, Jake Fitisemanu Jr. It reads in full:

The last 72 hours have been excruciating for our family. On Monday, we listened in disbelief as our son’s shooter admitted to reduced charges and was sentenced to juvenile detention. While we would not want any other family to go through the loss of a child, we are greatly disappointed with the leniency of the sentence, which is not proportional to the gravity of the crime that was committed. While the court may have ruled that this case is closed, this miscarriage of justice has not provided us with any closure.

We miss Tivani. We cry every day, but the full extent of our pain and heartbreak is not visible. We feel let down by a system that has not carried out justice. We feel mistreated by court staff who made us feel as if our grieving family was an unwelcome threat within the courtroom. We cannot help but feel that the legal proceedings would have been conducted differently, and that the outcome of this case would have been different, if Tivani, Paula, and Ephraim had been white, or upper class, or lived in a neighborhood on the other side of the valley.

While we are deeply saddened and disappointed with the systems that failed to deliver justice for our son, we continue to advocate for action and investment to proactively address issues with a focus on prevention, rather than reacting to violence when it’s too late. We will never stop fighting for justice, for our son, for Paula, Ephraim, and on behalf of all families who live with the unimaginable trauma of having their child’s life taken without justice being served.

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