Tuesday, March 13, 2007
from the Kennebec Journal
KENNEBEC COMMUTER: Find another way to get to work
New bishop pays visit, leads service
Where are the voters?
Augusta planners face busy agenda
Former UMA head keeps busy
Green delegates look for exciting convention
HIGH SCHOOL LACROSSE NOTES: Cony takes winning in stride
Why exactly is Earnhardt Jr. so popular?
All of today's:
News | Sports
from the Kennebec Journal
from the Morning Sentinel
ANIMALSAREABANDONED
Bricks from school to be auctioned off to support Run of River
Voters yawn at school budgets
FARMINGTON Estate yields a historical treasure trove
GREENS CONVENTION UPCOMING Two candidates to be at gathering; Maine can send 44 delegates to national convention, second only to California in clout
Retired educator compiling history of Maine teachers, administrators
HIGH SCHOOL LACROSSE NOTES: Messalonskee sees big picture
Why exactly is Earnhardt Jr. so popular?
All of today's:
News | Sports
from the Morning Sentinel
Alex J. Stetkis, of Canaan, was sentenced to the Mountain View Youth Development Center in Charleston until his 21st birthday in a plea agreement reached Monday in Skowhegan District Court, said Evert Fowle, district attorney for Somerset and Kennebec counties.
Justice Charles C. LaVerdiere also ordered Stetkis to pay restitution of $510 for the money not recovered in the robbery, Fowle said. The charges of Class A robbery with a gun and Class B conspiracy to commit robbery were heard in Skowhegan District Court.
The robbery occurred Dec. 15, when Stetkis and two other young men walked into the Snack Shack fast-food restaurant on Waterville Road. Stetkis brandished a handgun, later found to be unloaded, and another boy held a metal pipe. The three made off with about $2,000 in cash.
Andrew S. Williams, 17, of Smithfield, has yet to be sentenced. Dillon Perkins, 16, of Skowhegan, recently was sentenced to the same youth center and program as Stetkis until his 18th birthday, Fowle said.
Fowle said several factors entered into the decision not to try Stetkis as an adult, including the fact he had no prior criminal record and based on an evaluation by Robert Gallon, a psychologist hired by the State Forensic Service.
"He strongly recommended that he not be bound over to be tried as an adult," Fowle said. "Stetkis also was completely truthful and cooperated with the authorities. But most important was that the victims made it clear they did not think he should be bound over for trial as an adult. This view was important to us."
Defense attorney Kenneth Lexier said Stetkis and his parents were relieved the teen was sentenced as a juvenile.
"If he was found guilty as an adult he would have been spending many years in an adult correction facility," Lexier said.
Lexier said he believes the court made the right decision, even though Stetkis is almost an adult.
"He is a very young (17-year-old) whose reasoning and overall maturity is not that of an adult," Lexier said.
"There is no indication of a violent tendency or a mental health tendency."
Lexier commended Fowle for having done "the right thing" in the face of public sentiment for harsher punishment in crimes by teenagers.
"I am thankful everyone else can see the potential in Alex -- who he is, as opposed to what he did," Lexier said. "Alex will work hard up there and could be there until he's 21; that's certainly no slap on the wrist."
Fowle said a cross-section of the community -- including the police chief, a local minister and the probation and parole officer -- were contacted before the plea agreement was reached.
"I'm satisfied that this was the correct result," Fowle said. He said he now will work on Williams' case.
"It is our belief (Williams) was the mastermind who coordinated the plan of this robbery and provided the firearm, so his case has not been resolved yet," Fowle said. "We're gearing up to deal with him."
Darla L. Pickett -- 474-9534, Ext. 341
dpickett@centralmaine.com


Reader comments
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This world really needs to start working on the POSITIVE and maybe our children and grandchildren will have a bright future. The children in this case need to realize what they have done, and they will and have been sentenced in the court. We have a system here in the US and we need to entrust in that system. We place these people in the courts to make the right decision. Everyone is "Innocent Until Proven Guilty" ! Out court has decided what is best for these boys and their families and we ALL need to respect that!
The victims of the robbery have given their thoughts and how these kids were to be punished and we need to RESPECT them!
Let me leave you with one thought....."What if it were your child, grandchild, nephew, cousin, or brother?"
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