Quantcast
breaking news

Steubenville, Ohio, Football Players Guilty in Rape Trial

By: ABC News
Updated: March 17, 2013

Two Steubenville, Ohio, high school football players accused of sexually assaulting a 16-year-old girl have been found delinquent by a judge -- the juvenile court equivalent of guilty.

Trent Mays, 17, and Ma'lik Richmond, 16, were both sentenced to at least one year in juvenile jail and could be held until they are 21 years old. Mays was sentenced to an additional year for a charge related to distributing nude images of a minor.

Both teens were told to avoid contact with the victim at least until they are 21 and both were required to register as juvenile sex offenders.

Judge Thomas Lipps told the court that he reviewed the case's documents and text messages again. He said that many of the things learned during the trial were "profane" and "ugly."

Lipps said the case showed alcohol "as a particular danger to our teenage youth" before finding the teens "delinquent beyond a reasonable doubt."

RELATED: Witness Testifies to Recording Alleged Assault

Cries could be heard in court from the teens and their families.

Mays' attorney called him a "family-oriented, loving, young man" and asked the judge for leniency. Richmond's lawyer cried as he spoke about his client and his difficult family history.

Mays briefly addressed the court saying, "I would truly like to apologize to [the victim] and her family."

Richmond cried as he approached the front of the courtroom.

"I would like to apologize," he said, struggling to speak through his sobs. "I had no intentions to do anything like that. I'm sorry to put you guys through this."

Richmond's father also addressed the court and discussed not being there for his son and his own struggles with alcoholism.

"I'm sorry for what you all had to go through," Richmond's father told the victim's parents, "and I hope somewhere in your hearts that you can forgive Trent and Ma'lik for the pain that they caused your daughter and put you through."

He said he felt responsible for his son's actions.

"I apologize to the world, not only my community, for the bad light that has been shone on Steubenville and everybody else," Richmond said.

The verdict came after a four-day trial that included tearful testimony from the accuser who said she was "embarrassed and scared" after hearing about the night she was allegedly sexually assaulted while intoxicated.

"I honestly did not know what to think because I didn't remember anything," she testified.

The teen pieced together the night's events from Twitter, Instagram photos, a YouTube video, text messages and witnesses.

RELATED: Accuser Texts 'They Were Taking Advantage of Me'

Prosecutors accused Mays and Richmond of using their fingers to vaginally penetrate the girl at an alcohol-fueled party in Steubenville on the night of Aug. 11, 2012, as other teenagers watched. Mays was also accused of later sending text messages that included photographs of the girl with her clothing removed and charged with distributing nude images of a minor.

Brian Duncan, a lawyer representing Mays, told ABC News' "20/20" that what occurred that night was consensual.

"Trent Mays did not rape the young lady in question," Duncan said.

Richmond, in an exclusive interview recently with "20/20" anchor Elizabeth Vargas, said, "I didn't rape anybody. I didn't witness a rape going on.

"And if I would have thought that somebody was being raped or anything like that," he added, "I would have stopped it."

The case drew further attention when some outside the small Rust Belt town accused local officials of willfully protecting the football players, seen as hometown heroes.

ABC News' Russell Goldman contributed to this report.

Comments

Readers Feel...

hello
Related Content

A massive tornado near Oklahoma City leaves more than 50 people dead, including children who were taking cover at an elementary school....

Officials at the Texas Tech University System announced the establishment of the Texas Tech University Health Sciences Center at El Paso as the fourth university under the TTU System.  ...

What is the next step for the tea party groups who feel they were unfairly scrutinized by the Internal Revenue Service? For many of them, it may be lawsuits, against the IRS....

A firefighter was trapped early Monday in a six-alarm blaze at a Dallas condominium complex, the city's fire department said....

The Senate Judiciary Committee is aiming this week to pass a landmark immigration bill to secure the border and offer citizenship to millions, setting up a high-stakes debate on the Senate...

A Houston property owner has installed headstones as part of a convoluted plot to keep vagrants from loitering on his land....

The man convicted in a murder trial that hinged on a paralyzed victim blinking his eyes to identify his shooter plans to appeal, a defense attorney said after the verdict....

Newly released 911 tapes from a panicked homeowner in Washington state give a detailed play by play of a neighbor's alleged bulldozer rampage that destroyed four homes, a boat and a truck....

Televangelist Pat Robertson is under fire once again after telling the wife of a cheating husband to get over the infidelity and provide a better home so he doesn't "wander."...

The unlikely pair -- an itinerant hitchhiker turned Internet celebrity and a lawyer three times his age -- met amid the neon lights of Times Square and headed back to a squat brick home on a New...

Officials at the Texas Tech University System announced the establishment of the Texas Tech University Health Sciences Center at El Paso as the fourth university under the TTU System.

 

After IRS Scandal, Tea Party Groups Eye the Courtroom
What is the next step for the tea party groups who feel they were unfairly scrutinized by the Internal Revenue Service? For many of them, it may be lawsuits, against the IRS.
Firefighter trapped in six-alarm blaze at Dallas condo
A firefighter was trapped early Monday in a six-alarm blaze at a Dallas condominium complex, the city's fire department said.
Senate Committee Moves Toward Vote on Immigration
The Senate Judiciary Committee is aiming this week to pass a landmark immigration bill to secure the border and offer citizenship to millions, setting up a high-stakes debate on the Senate floor.
Phony Tombstones Used as Scarecrow for Vagrants
A Houston property owner has installed headstones as part of a convoluted plot to keep vagrants from loitering on his land.
Ohioan to Appeal Conviction in 'Dying Blinks' Case
The man convicted in a murder trial that hinged on a paralyzed victim blinking his eyes to identify his shooter plans to appeal, a defense attorney said after the verdict.
911 Bulldozer Rampage Call: 'He's Smashing My House Plum to Pieces'
Newly released 911 tapes from a panicked homeowner in Washington state give a detailed play by play of a neighbor's alleged bulldozer rampage that destroyed four homes, a boat and a truck.
Pat Robertson Under Fire for Advice to Wife of Cheating Husband
Televangelist Pat Robertson is under fire once again after telling the wife of a cheating husband to get over the infidelity and provide a better home so he doesn't "wander."
'Hatchet Hitchhiker' Arrested in NJ Homicide
The unlikely pair -- an itinerant hitchhiker turned Internet celebrity and a lawyer three times his age -- met amid the neon lights of Times Square and headed back to a squat brick home on a quiet New Jersey cul-de-sac, authorities say.
-->
 
 
 
 
 
©1998 - 2013 Everythinglubbock.com
Nexstar Broadcasting, Inc.
All Rights Reserved