11 years for one punch in the face

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Mar 13, 2003
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#3
yea i always wanna fight a dude who seems to be minding his own watering some plants.........Shit just gets me piiiiiised...


Im betting dude really died cuz of that noggin of his hitting that hard ass concrete....What a shame!
 
Apr 26, 2006
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#5
Wow, so this man is trying to mind his own fucking business watering the fucking plants and gets socked dead for it?


Fuck, that's some ghetto ass shit. I'd love to do the same to that du-rag wearing piece of shit.
 
Dec 3, 2005
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#11
i wish i didnt see that too. probably a nice old man, taking care of a garden in the middle of a turnabout in the fuckin central district and some bitch ass kid who thinks he's hard wanna come up and punch him for no reason. RIP to that man. this was all over the news awhile back here. i never saw the video of this and i wish i didnt. punk ass shit gives my area a bad name

edit: this happened in July of 2008
 
Dec 4, 2006
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#12
That's why I don't like to fight no more or get into arguments....

It could be me or the other person .......

that shit was uncalled for and 11 years it's a small sentence...
 

Nuttkase

not nolettuce
Jun 5, 2002
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#13
Traffic circle dispute turns tragic
Quiet neighborhood chilled by death of man tending garden
By KERY MURAKAMI AND HECTOR CASTRO
P-I REPORTERS

A 60-year-old Rainier Beach man seriously injured in a dispute over a neighborhood traffic circle died Thursday night at Harborview Medical Center.

James Paroline had been in a coma since being punched and hitting his head on the concrete during the altercation Wednesday, while Seattle police continued to look for the suspect believed to have caused his injuries. He died about 9:20 p.m., a spokeswoman for the medical center said.

"The thing is, none of this had to happen," neighbor Richard Dixon said.

At about 7:45 p.m. Wednesday, Paroline was watering the little garden he had planted on the traffic circle at 61st Avenue South and South Cooper Street, Dixon said.

He ran a garden hose from his house at the corner to the traffic circle -- one of roughly 700 that city transportation officials estimate have gardens on them. When Dixon, 57, who was driving to Safeway, reached the corner intending to make a right turn, he found that Paroline, as he often does, had put a traffic cone in the right lane to keep drivers from driving over the hose.

Paroline often complained about drivers running it over, said Tim Aguero, 39, who also lives on the quiet street of small houses and florid lawns.

But that cone led to a confrontation with another motorist, in which Paroline was punched in the face and rushed to the hospital with life-threatening injuries, police said Thursday.

Dixon said Paroline told him to go left around the circle but, worried about a ticket, Dixon asked Paroline to move the cone and called 911 when he refused. Then, Dixon said, he saw a car of young women drive up.

One got out to tell Paroline to move the cone, police said. When he refused, the women began moving the cones themselves. Paroline sprayed one of the women with his hose.

"When she got sprayed, she really went crazy," Dixon said.

Ronald Tobin, 14, was outside playing when he heard the arguing. "They were yelling, and they were all up on (Paroline)," he said.

Police said that a short time later, another car drove up and a passenger -- described as an African-American man in his 20s, about 5 feet, 10 inches tall, weighing about 160 pounds, and wearing a gray tank top, black jeans and a blue do-rag -- got out to confront Paroline.

The man delivered "one punch," Dixon said.

Detectives do not know how the suspect is connected to the girls. But Tobin said the girls called out to a passing motorist just before the man showed up.

Police spokesman Mark Jamieson confirmed that the man hit Paroline, who fell on his back, struck his head on the concrete and was knocked unconscious. The assailant then got in his car and sped off.

A photo taken by a neighbor showed the bearded man lying bleeding by the traffic circle, in khaki shorts, a gray T-shirt and sandals, and clutching the hose.

"This was completely needless. He'd been watering the traffic circle with the hose and the cone for quite some time. And this is the first time anything has happened," Jamieson said. "Most reasonable people just wait or go the other way. But for some reason the people in the car decided to make something out of it."

On Thursday, some described Paroline as somewhat of a curmudgeon, who'd call the police about neighbors singing in their yard or leaving recycling bins out too long.

"It shouldn't have happened, but I thought he'd annoy the wrong person one day," said a neighbor, Patty Joseph.

But Aguero said he'd often see Paroline walk his two dogs down the street. "He's a nice guy, sort of the neighborhood watchdog," he said.

Paroline had petitioned the city to install the traffic circle and a second one a block away.

"He's had some bad luck with that circle," Aguero said; about a year ago, a car drove through his front yard and into the front of his house.

"He said the neighbors are his solace, that we were kind of like his family, because I don't think he had a lot of people in his life," Aguero said. "He's very generous. He was always asking if I needed any help (gardening), and I was welcome to (any of his plants).

"He had his quirks, though, about the things that would upset him in the neighborhood."

But Dixon said none of it should have happened. "He shouldn't have put the cones in the street. She should have just driven the other way. He shouldn't have sprayed her. (The assailant) shouldn't have hit him."
http://www.seattlepi.com/local/370251_beating11.html
 

Nuttkase

not nolettuce
Jun 5, 2002
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#14
Man sentenced to more than 11 years in prison for traffic-circle slaying
A 29-year-old man who fatally punched a South Seattle man during a confrontation at a traffic circle last summer was sentenced this afternoon to slightly more than 11 years and three months in prison.

By Jennifer Sullivan

Brian Keith Brown pleaded guilty Monday to second-degree murder.
Related

A 29-year-old Renton man who fatally punched a South Seattle man during an argument at a traffic circle last summer was sentenced this afternoon to just over 11 years and three months in prison.

Brian Keith Brown apologized for the slaying of James Paroline, but said that he was coming to the defense of a group of girls who were arguing with the Rainier Beach man. Paroline, 60, was gardening inside a traffic circle when Brown confronted him.

The single punch broke Paroline's nose and caused him to fall to the pavement. Paroline died from a head injury.

After the beating, Brown was on the run for about a week.

In a letter he recently filed with King County Superior Court, Brown said he is "sickened" by what he did.

"I had no intention of causing the death of James Paroline but that I know that but for my actions he would be alive," Brown wrote in the letter.

Brown, who pleaded guilty to second-degree murder in March, has prior convictions for assault, drug possession, trespassing and driving with a suspended license.

Prosecutors had sought a sentence of 11 years and four months in prison. Brown's defense lawyer, Ramona Brandes, sought a sentence of eight to nine years.

The confrontation began while Paroline was watering plants in the traffic circle near his home, where he set cones on the street to protect his watering hose.

Instead of driving around the cones, a group of girls got out of a car and two yelled at Paroline.

The girls said Paroline squirted them with water. A cellphone video showed him walking away from the girls and trying to resume watering the plants.

One of the girls summoned Brown, who was driven to the scene. He hit Paroline once and walked away.


Brown was arrested by Seattle police after the NAACP, the Seattle Medium black community newspaper and Mount Zion Baptist Church brokered his surrender. Brown's mother, Brenda Battiste, of Sacramento, Calif., said he was scared and upset that the incident has been painted as racially motivated by many in the community.

Brown is black, and Paroline was white.

The killing outraged neighbors, who held a vigil and came in droves to a meeting with police.

Brown's crime qualified as "felony murder" because it happened during the commission of second-degree assault, a felony. The recommended sentence of nearly 11 ½ years was less than the standard range of 12 years, eight months to 21 years.

Prosecutors said their recommended sentence matched the high end of the sentencing range for manslaughter, a lesser charge. The case is akin to manslaughter because it involved a reckless — rather than deliberate — fatal act by Brown, they say.

But because of a new quirk in state law, felony murder is easier to prove. Had prosecutors charged Brown with manslaughter, they would have needed to prove Brown knew one punch could cause death, Satterberg explained.

Historically, about four to six cases a year in the county arise from a "one-punch homicide," he said.

The girls whose confrontation with Paroline preceded the attack were not charged with a crime. There is no "accessory" law in Washington state that is relevant in this case, said Ian Goodhew, deputy chief of staff. To be accomplices, the girls would have had to have assisted Brown in the assault.
http://seattletimes.nwsource.com/html/localnews/2009225193_webtrafficcircle15m.html

I'm sure the guy didn't intend to kill him but you have to be held accountable for your actions.
 

HIM

Sicc OG
Sep 27, 2002
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#17
As a grown man, you have to be slower to bomb on someone these days, especially for stupid s--t like this and definitely if you're already in the system..you're not kids anymore...all bad...I like how his neighbor kept it real though "It shouldn't have happened, but I thought he'd annoy the wrong person one day," said a neighbor, Patty Joseph.