Posted on September 12, 2013

N.J. Teen Gets 17 Years in Prison for Killing Girl

Geoff Mulvihill, USA Today, September 12, 2013

A New Jersey teenager called his actions “a big mistake” as he was sentenced Thursday to 17 years in state prison for fatally strangling a 12-year-old girl whom he had lured to his home with an offer to trade bicycle parts.

Justin Robinson, now 16, pleaded guilty last month to aggravated manslaughter in a deal with prosecutors who were facing some major challenges in the case, including a lack of physical evidence to determine whether he or his brother Dante Robinson killed Autumn Pasquale in October 2012.

Autumn Pasquale

Autumn Pasquale

Robinson, who looked mostly straight ahead during the two-hour sentencing hearing, must serve more than 14 years before he is eligible for parole.

“I’m sorry. I never meant for this to happen,” he told Judge Walter Marshall. “This was all a big mistake.”

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“I believe the defendant deserves more than 17 years,” said the girl’s father, Anthony Pasquale, who as a mail carrier had delivered letters to Robinson’s family in Clayton, where the families of the victim and her killer had deep roots. “I believe his fate should be nothing but death.”

When he pleaded guilty, Justin Robinson said he acted alone. During a sentencing proceeding, neither he, his lawyers, nor prosecutors shed light on a motive for the killing, or even what happened beyond what was already known: Pasquale went to his house several blocks from hers after receiving a Facebook offer to trade bike parts on Oct. 20. When she didn’t return home that night, her family, then the entire community, set off in a frantic search. Two days later, her body was found in a recycling bin behind the home next to Robinson’s.

Justin Robinson

Justin Robinson

A break in the case for investigators came when the boy’s mother, Anita Saunders, called police after seeing something troubling in a Facebook post from one of her sons. Speaking briefly during the sentencing, Saunders told the judge that media accounts of what happened were incorrect. “Nobody knows exactly what happened the day of the accident,” she said.

Robinson’s lawyer, Jean Faulkner, told the judge that the boy had post-traumatic stress disorder from being physically abused as a young boy and seeing his father strangle his mother more than once. “This is a learned behavior,” Faulkner said.

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“When I see the blue recycling bins out, I cry to think Autumn’s innocent life was so easily discarded like a piece of trash,” said the girl’s maternal grandmother, Mary Pasquale, who had taught Justin Robinson in school.

Prosecutors agreed to allow Robinson to plea to aggravated manslaughter rather murder because of challenges with the case. Because of his age and a developmental disability, it was not a sure thing that he would be moved to adult court. If he had been convicted of murder in juvenile court, he could have had a chance of parole in less than seven years.

They also have said that there was no evidence besides his confession that made it clear that it was he and not his brother who killed the girl.

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