Juliano Crawford-Vieira's killers sentenced to 12 and 9 months in jail - Action News
Home WebMail Tuesday, November 26, 2024, 12:07 PM | Calgary | -8.3°C | Regions Advertise Login | Our platform is in maintenance mode. Some URLs may not be available. |
Calgary

Juliano Crawford-Vieira's killers sentenced to 12 and 9 months in jail

A pair of teens convicted of killing Juliano Crawford-Vieira in a swarming attack outside a Calgary house party more than two years ago have been sentenced to 12 and 9 months in jail.

3rd killer pleaded guilty to manslaughter last month and received a 10-year sentence

Grade 11 student Juliano Crawford-Vieira died in 2014 after being stabbed outside a house party in Braeside. (Facebook)

A pair of teens convicted of killing Juliano Crawford-Vieira in a swarming attack outside a Calgary house party more than two years ago will spend no more than one year behind bars.

Bothwere convicted of manslaughter in June, but because they were 16 and 17yearsold at the time of the crime, theycannot be named under the Youth Criminal Justice Act.

Crawford-Vieirawas a Grade 11 studentwho died after being punched, kicked and stabbed by a group ofpartygoersin March 2014.

One of the young killers got a one-year jail sentence,six months in a group home and a year-long conditional sentence.

The second received a nine-month jail sentence, three months in a group home and a year-long conditional sentence.

The maximum jail sentence for a youth convicted of manslaughter is two years in custody and one year in a group home.

"No sentence that this court gives to TP and JL can come close to giving any equal measure for the loss ofJuliano, a young and vibrant individual," wrote youth court Judge NickD'Souzain his sentencing decision.

4 people initially charged

The fatal altercation began around midnight on March 8, 2014, in the southwest community ofBraesidewhenthe host of a high school house party asked everyone to leave.

At that point, an argument betweentwo groups of friendsbecameviolent.

Some of the teens in the groups had a history of "bad blood," according to prosecutor Katherine Love, who saidCrawford-Vieira was in noway the aggressor but he became the target.

Last month, in the middle of his second-degree murder trial, TrentHynnepleaded guilty to the lesser offence of manslaughter.

Hynneconfessed and bragged about stabbingCrawford-Vieira. He was sentenced to 10 years in prison.

A fourth person,Roland Smith, was alsocharged with second-degree murder and attempted murder, but the prosecution indicated he will plead guilty to accessory after the fact to murder in March.