Posted on July 5, 2007

Seventh-Grader Arrested In Gang Rape; Police Seek Nine More Teens

Antigone Barton and Rochelle E.B. Gilken, Palm Beach Post, July 4, 2007

A 14-year-old boy confessed Tuesday that he was one of the masked attackers who terrorized a Dunbar Village woman and her son in their home, gang-raping the woman at gunpoint and assaulting the child.

Police said they hope to arrest nine more teenaged assailants who participated in the June 18 attack.

Avion Lawson, a seventh-grader at the Gold Coast alternative middle school, was charged Tuesday with armed sexual battery by multiple perpetrators, armed home invasion, aggravated battery and an additional sexual assault charge.

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Lawson was linked to the attack when his DNA was found in a condom at the victims’ home, police said.

Tuesday evening, reporters converged at his family’s home while Lawson’s relatives sat on a porch facing a basketball court where they said Lawson liked to play.

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Lawson was also charged with purse snatching and assault in January.

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Lawson was soft-spoken and cooperative but expressed no remorse, the spokesman said.

The attack began at 8:30 on a Monday evening when one assailant lured the woman from her home by telling her the tires on her car were flat. There, two more masked, armed attackers ambushed her, forcing her back inside.

During the next 20 minutes, seven more attackers followed the others into the apartment, where they raped the mother repeatedly, smashed a plate over the boy’s head and poured household chemicals into his eyes, as well as other acts.

After the assailants fled, the victims walked a mile to Good Samaritan Medical Center, where staff members called police.

The details of the crime included acts that revolted veteran investigators.

The attackers did not seem to know the victims, who kept to themselves because the mother was worried that the neighborhood was unsafe for her son, police said.

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Lawson’s mother, who works at a hospital cafeteria, brought her son in at investigators’ request. Lawson also lives sometimes with his grandmother, who fretted Tuesday that she would be thrown out of her Dunbar Village public housing apartment.

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A friend of Lawson’s who said his name was Gus said the seventh-grader also had called him earlier, but he did not divulge what they had discussed.

“We speak in silence,” he said, and, pacing, took a cellphone call.

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