ALBUQUERQUE, N.M. (AP) — A judge cleared the way Thursday for
a New Mexico teenager who shot and killed his parents and three younger
siblings to be sentenced as a juvenile and released from state custody
by the time he turns 21 after the teen's attorneys argued he could be
psychologically rehabilitated.
Nehemiah Griego was 15 when he opened fire in his
family's home south of Albuquerque, killing his mother as she slept and
then his 9-year-old brother and two sisters, ages 5 and 2, authorities
said. Griego's father was the last to die: The teen waited in a bathroom
and ambushed the gang member turned pastor after he returned home,
sheriff's officials said.
Now 18, Griego has undergone nearly two
years of therapy at a state adolescent treatment center — where his
teachers, psychiatrists and others say he has made significant progress
after being diagnosed with schizoaffective disorder, post-traumatic
stress disorder and some learning disabilities.
"It all points in
the same direction," said Jeffrey Buckels, Griego's public defender.
"He's getting better and deserves a chance."
Judge
John Romero ruled on Griego's treatment after a lengthy hearing in
children's court to determine whether he could be psychologically
rehabilitated and sentenced as a juvenile, which allows his release from
state custody in just more than two years. Griego turns 21 in March
2018.
He pleaded guilty in October to two counts of second-degree
murder for his parents' deaths and three counts of child abuse resulting
in death, which his attorney said showed he had taken responsibility
for the crime.
Prosecutor Michelle Pato countered that assertion,
recalling testimony in the hearing from some who said Griego seemed
matter of fact and emotionless the day after the shooting and during a
psychiatrist's interview last year.
After the 2013 killings,
authorities alleged that Griego reloaded his parents' two semi-automatic
rifles and put them in the family van and planned to gun down Wal-Mart
shoppers, though investigators had no information that Griego actually
went to a Wal-Mart the day of the shooting.
A security official
said in the days after the shooting, Griego spent much of the day
wandering the campus at Calvary Church, an Albuquerque megachurch where
his father had been a pastor.
In closing arguments, Pato described
the January 2013 killings as predatory and cold-blooded, with Griego
waking his younger brother to show him his mother's body before shooting
the 9-year-old too. Griego took a photo of the two victims before
shooting his younger sisters in their beds, Pato said.
"He played
with his brother that day knowing he was going to kill him," Pato said.
"This was very much planned, very thought out and cruel."
As
chilling as details of the crime may have been, Judge Romero, however,
said state law called for the hearing and his findings to focus on
Griego and his prospects for rehabilitation, not the offense. Defense
attorneys' case presented a narrative of a teen who grew up in a
chaotic environment, enduring emotional abuse by his mother and physical
abuse at the hands of his father that likely led to a traumatic brain
injury.
A residential
supervisor at Sequoyah Lodge, where Griego is undergoing treatment, said
the 18-year-old had matured into a role model for other troubled boys,
while one teacher described the teen as a thoughtful student despite
having expressed racist viewpoints, a fascination with war and Nazi
Germany, and the notion of absolute power.
A
forensic psychologist for the defense said he recommended Griego
receive five more years of treatment, despite the likeliness that
Griego's treatment at Sequoyah Lodge would likely end in 2018. The judge
didn't rule Thursday on continuing Griego's treatment after he turns
21.
A hearing will be held to sentence Griego as a juvenile in three to six weeks.
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