Anybody who knows Oklahoma District Court Judge Mike Norman
probably yawned at the news that he’d sentenced a teen offender to
attend church as part of his probation arrangement, and that the judge’s
pastor was in the courtroom at the time.
Not only had
he handed down such a sentence before, but he’d required one man to
bring the church program back with him when he reported to court.
“The
Lord works in many ways,” Norman, 69, told ABC News today. “I’ve done a
little bit of this kind of thing before, but never on such a serious
charge.”
Norman sentenced Tyler Alred, 17, Tuesday after he
pleaded guilty to first-degree manslaughter in August for killing friend
and passenger John Luke Dum in a car crash.
Dum died on impact
in December after Alred crashed his Chevrolet pickup truck, ejecting
Dum. Alred was
16 at the time of the crash and had been drinking prior
to the deadly accident.
Oklahoma Highway Patrol issued a
Breathalyzer at the time, and although Alred was under the state’s legal
alcohol limit, he had been drinking underage.
The judge could
have sent Alred to jail but, instead, taking into account his clean
criminal and school records, sentenced him to wear a drug and alcohol
bracelet, participate in counseling groups and attend a church of his
choosing – weekly. He must also graduate from high school.
To
avoid jail time, Norman gave Alred a maximum 10-year deferred sentence.
He’d never passed down the church-attendance requirement for someone as
young as Alred, said Norman, who has worked as a district Judge in
Muskogee for 14 years.
“It’s not going to be automatic,
I guarantee you,” Norman said of the church sentence on future
manslaughter charges. “There are a lot of people who say I can’t do what
I did. They’re telling me I can’t legally sentence someone to church.”
Alred’s
lawyer is not among the critics. “I usually represent outlaws and
criminals,” defense attorney Donn Baker told the Muskogee Phoenix
. “This is a kid that made a mistake. I think he’s worth saving.”
In
the courtroom this week, an emotional scene between the victim’s family
and Alred played out after statements from Dum’s mother, father and two
sisters were read during the sentencing. Dum’s father and Alred stood
up in court, turned toward each other and embraced one another.
“At
that moment, it sure became a reality to me that I would sentence this
boy to church” to help set him on the right path, Norman, a member
of First Baptist Church in Muskogee, said. “There’s nothing I can do to
make this up to the family.
“I told my preacher I thought I led
more people to Jesus than he had but, then again, more of my people
have amnesia. They soon forget once they get out of jail.”
After
completing the rest of the requirements in his sentence, Alred will have
the charge removed from his record. “Only time will tell if we’ve saved
Tyler Alred’s life,” the judge said.
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