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GUILTY - 2nd teen convicted in bomb plot

by Hawes Spencer

The 15-year-old boy whose secrecy-shrouded trial wrapped Tuesday afternoon has been found guilty of the same two counts pleaded to by his 16-year-old co-conspirator: conspiracy to murder and conspiracy to blow up a schoolhouse.The boy, a gun fan, according to various sources including his MySpace.com profile, was attending Albemarle High School until his February 1 arrest, which was heralded in a press conference two days later.
Since then, authorities have been tight-lipped about the case and its alleged evidence with the prosecutor, Commonwealth’s Attorney Jim Camblos, cautioning reporters after the trial that anyone who talked about the case would be violating a “court order.”
“There’s no gag order,” says a deputy clerk in the Juvenile & Domestic Relations Court, after allegedly conferring with Susan L. Whitlock, judge in the high-profile case. The deputy clerk declined to give her name, and the similarly reluctant clerk of the court, Alice Price Waddy, confirmed the facts for a reporter. Neither would utter anything about the two 13-year-olds authorities say they detained as part of the conspiracy case.
The unnamed deputy clerk says that sentencing for the 16-year-old is set for April 5, and April 12 for the 15-year-old, both of whom are still detained. The outcome of the 13-year-olds’ cases, who were tried with the 15-year-old, has not be learned by the Hook.
–By Hawes Spencer
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Comments

  1. Steve
    March 30th, 2006 | 6:18 pm

    Let me try and get this right…. the Commonwealth Attorney says the outcome of the case can’t be revealed without violating a court order, he has filed a motion to see how much he can release, and yet a deputy clerk says there is no gag order and releases the outcome.

    What’s wrong with this picture? What can’t be revealed, the outcome of the 15-year-old juvenile or the outcome of the 13-year-old kids? /Steve

  2. TrvlnMn
    March 30th, 2006 | 9:52 pm

    If there are facts in evidence, and these kids were convicted and sentanced. Then that evidence needs to be made public (minus the names of the kids).

    When individuals are scooped up off the street, charged with a crime, then prosecuted and convicted away from the public eyes. Well you�ll have to forgive me for saying that reminds me a little too much of how things are done in some of the countries we don�t like.

    In this instance I�m more inclined to believe that the information blackout from the court has less to do with protecting the identities of the minors, than with protecting the police and procecutors from bad P.R.

    Could I be wrong? Sure. But Show me the evidence and prove me wrong.

  3. cvillenews.com » Blog Archive » Bomb Case Gag Debate, Conviction
    March 30th, 2006 | 10:28 pm

    […] In today’s Daily Progress, Liesel Nowak outlines the legal debate over the bomb trial gag order, describing the case as starting with a bang and ending with a whimper. But the debate may be irrelevant—both The Hook and The Richmond Times-Dispatch are reporting this evening that there is, in fact, no gag order. That’s how we now know that the 15-year-old in the case has been found guilty of two counts of conspiracy, and will be sentenced in two weeks. […]

  4. outskirts » Bomb plots, poop, and cameras
    March 31st, 2006 | 7:32 am

    […] The local school system continues to modernize. Camera security will be set up to deter students from “misbehaving.” This makes total sense, since before the cameras students would develop plots to bomb the schools. Looks like two of the students have been found guilty. I’ll be cameras might help deter poop pranks as well. A gang prevention program is getting started this summer. […]

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