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Posted: 2024-08-19T18:44:53Z | Updated: 2024-08-19T18:44:53Z Chrystul Kizer Sentenced To 11 Years In Prison For Killing Her Alleged Sex Trafficker | HuffPost

Chrystul Kizer Sentenced To 11 Years In Prison For Killing Her Alleged Sex Trafficker

Kizer fatally shot Randall Volar in 2018 when she was 17, and her attorneys argued she shouldn't be held criminally liable due to a law protecting sex trafficking victims.

KENOSHA, Wis. (AP) A Milwaukee woman who argued that she was legally allowed to a kill a man because he was sexually trafficking her was sentenced Monday to 11 years in prison after pleading guilty to a reduced count of reckless homicide.

A Kenosha County judge sentenced Chrystul Kizer to 11 years of initial confinement followed by 5 years of extended supervision in the 2018 death of Randall Volar, 34. She was given credit for 570 days of time served.

Kizer had pleaded guilty in May to second-degree reckless homicide in Volars death, allowing her to avoid trial and a possible life sentence.

Prosecutors said Kizer shot Volar at his Kenosha home in 2018, when she was 17, and that she then burned his house down and stole his BMW. Kizer was charged with multiple counts, including first-degree intentional homicide, arson, car theft and being a felon in possession of a firearm.

Kizer, now 24, argued that she met Volar on a sex trafficking website. He had been molesting her and selling her as a prostitute over the year leading up to his death, she argued. She told detectives that she shot him after he tried to touch her.

Her attorneys argued that Kizer couldnt be held criminally liable for any of it under a 2008 state law that absolves sex trafficking victims of any offense committed as a direct result of being trafficked. Most states have passed similar laws over the last 10 years providing sex trafficking victims at least some level of criminal immunity.

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Chrystul Kizer is pictured during a hearing in the Kenosha County Courthouse on November 15, 2019.
Sarah L. Voisin/The Washington Post via Getty Images

Prosecutors countered that Wisconsin legislators couldnt possibly have intended for protections to extend to homicide. Anti-violence groups flocked to Kizers defense, arguing in court briefs that trafficking victims feel trapped and sometimes feel as if they have to take matters into their own hands. The state Supreme Court ruled in 2022 that Kizer could raise the defense during trial.

Kizers attorneys did not immediately respond to phone messages seeking comment on her sentence.

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