A teenager convicted of
orchestrating an attack on a middle school classmate who was soaked in alcohol
and lit ablaze was sentenced to 11 years in prison Thursday even as he
continued to insist on his innocence.
Circuit Judge Matthew Destry
agreed with prosecutors that Matthew Bent, 18, deserved the same sentence as
the youth who flicked the lighter during the 2009 attack on Michael Brewer, who
was then 15. Although Bent did not set the fire or pour the flammable liquid,
Destry said he was just as much to blame. Bent was convicted of aggravated
battery in June.
“I cannot ignore that, but for Mr. Bent’s orchestration of these
events, none of this would have happened,” Destry said.
Before he was sentenced, Bent
turned and apologized to Brewer but said he was not the ringleader.
“I didn’t intend for any of this to happen,” he said. “I didn’t
tell nobody to do that.”
Brewer survived by leaping
into an apartment complex swimming pool but suffered severe burns over
two-thirds of his body. In court Thursday, he looked in good shape physically
but family members say his skin grafts still cause pain and he suffers from
frequent nightmares. His mother, Valerie Brewer, said the family was satisfied
with the sentence.
“What happened to Michael touched people around the world. We got
justice today,” she said.
Brewer himself declined
comment. “I’m good,” he said.
The series of events began
with a marijuana pipe that Brewer testified Bent wanted him to purchase. When
Brewer declined, Bent allegedly went to the Brewer home and tried to steal a
bicycle. Bent was arrested on theft charges.
The next day, fearing a
reprisal, Brewer stayed home from Deerfield Beach Middle School that most of
the boys involved attended. When school let out, Bent and a group of boys were
walking home when they happened to find a jug of rubbing alcohol atop an
apartment complex wall. About the same time, they ran into Brewer, who had
decided to go over to a friend’s house.
What happened next is in
dispute. Some boys say Bent offered to pay them to punch Brewer, and others say
it was Bent who signaled that they would pour the alcohol on him. Ultimately,
according to trial testimony, the jug was dumped on Brewer by Denver Colorado
Jarvis and then Jesus Mendez flicked his lighter.
Jarvis and Mendez pleaded no
contest to attempted second-degree murder charges. Jarvis is serving an
eight-year sentence
and Mendez was sentenced to 11 years.
Bent at one point was
offered a plea deal and eight-year sentence, but opted for trial. He was
acquitted of the attempted murder charge but convicted of aggravated battery in
June.
Prosecutor Maria Schneider
had urged Destry to impose the 11-year term on Bent, still less than the
15-year maximum.
“This young man refuses to accept any responsibility for what
happened to Michael Brewer. I think that’s very disturbing,” she said.
Bent will be given credit for
the three-plus years he has already spent in jail, leaving him with less than
eight years to go. His father, Dennis Bent, said the conviction and sentence
will be appealed.
“This case, it’s not over,” Dennis Bent said. “He didn’t do
anything wrong. I don’t see it as fully justice.”
And the LORD said
unto him, Therefore whosoever slayeth Cain, vengeance shall be taken on him
sevenfold. And the LORD set a mark upon Cain, lest any finding him should
kill him.
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Eze 25:17
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And I will execute
great vengeance upon them with furious rebukes; and they shall know that I
[am] the LORD, when I shall lay my vengeance upon them.
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Deu 32:35
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To me [belongeth]
vengeance, and recompence; their foot shall slide in [due] time: for the day
of their calamity [is] at hand, and the things that shall come upon them make
haste.
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