FLORIDA....12-year-old boy, 14-year-old girl involved in shootout with Florida deputies.... they were home invaders

tallblacknyc

Rising Star
Certified Pussy Poster
This won't last long either!

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Fuck that cac..shoot him in his head
 

ThaBurgerPimp

Rising Star
BGOL Patreon Investor
You knew it was coming.... and I did too.... was shocked like hell when you said it was posted.... they're juveniles.... and cacs.... that's why it went down with the quickness.... but everything on the net is forever....... :yes:

sidebar: I never saw the video, but was that still at the police station? Were they fixing him a meal.... some hot pockets? :hmm:




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Shocked they didnt take him to McDonalds or Burger King,and were offering to take some to the girl at the hospital :rolleyes:
 

Politic Negro

Rising Star
BGOL Investor
14-year-old girl accused of shooting at Volusia County Sheriff's deputies and charged with attempted murder appeared on Wednesday before a new judge who set another hearing in the case for February.

Nicole Marie Jackson-Maldonado was charged as an adult with attempted first-degree murder of a law enforcement officer (firearm), burglary of a dwelling while armed and criminal mischief causing damage of $1,000 or more.

The teenager appeared for the first time before Circuit Judge Elizabeth Blackburn on Wednesday at the S. James Foxman Justice Center in Daytona Beach. Blackburn began hearing felony cases this week after she took over a division previously presided over by Circuit Judge Sandra Upchurch as part of a shifting of judicial duties in the circuit.


The girl was wearing an orange jail jumpsuit and her hands were handcuffed to a belt on her waist as is routine for all inmates appearing before a judge. The teenager appeared confused at first about the purpose of the hearing.

Blackburn asked the teen if she understood what her attorney was requesting.

"He's requesting to continue the case. He's not quite ready to set it for trial at this point?" Blackburn asked Jackson-Maldonado.

The teen nodded and said "yes."

Blackburn said a case-management conference will be scheduled for February. The judge said that the case is six months old, but she did not see any notices of any depositions being scheduled.

"I want to make sure we get things moving on track so that we can set a realistic target date to try this," Blackburn said.

Assistant Public Defender Larry Avallone is representing Jackson-Maldonado, and Assistant State Attorney Sarah Thomas, who was not present on Wednesday, is prosecuting the case. Another prosecutor appeared in her place.

The teen, who has been charged as an adult, is being held without bond at the Volusia County Branch Jail.

The girl had already had some brushes with the law when on June 1 things escalated according to investigators.


On June 1, Jackson-Maldonado got into an argument with staff at the Florida United Methodist Children’s Home in Enterprise where she was living. It all started, according to a report, because she wanted to go outside and catch lizards.

Jackson-Maldonado and a 12-year-old boy then ran away from the children’s home. They ended up breaking into a house and arming themselves with an AK-47, a 12-gauge shotgun and a pistol they found inside, according to reports.

When Volusia County Sheriff’s Office deputies surrounded the house, the 14-year-old girl and 12-year-old boy started shooting at the deputies, according to reports and body camera video.

Deputies held their fire initially. But in the end, deputies shot Jackson-Maldonado after they said she pointed a shotgun or rifle at them, according to reports. At least one deputy said he believed she fired the weapon. The boy surrendered and was not shot.

The News-Journal is not identifying the 12-year-old because he has been charged as a juvenile.

Three movies a week
Jackson-Maldonado is isolated from adult offenders as required, Volusia County Spokesman Gary Davidson wrote in an email.

Like other inmates, Jackson-Maldonado receives things such as “out of cell time and recreation based on behavior and communication with friends and family,” Davidson wrote.

The teenager is also receiving “an extra calorie diet and milk specific for juveniles” Davidson wrote.

She also has a “connection” with a Volusia County school teacher, a case manager through Community Partnership for Children and a guardian ad litem, Davidson wrote.

Based on her behavior, Jackson-Maldonado receives three movies per week which are provided by case management, Davidson wrote.

The branch jail has 959 inmates currently and the adjoining correctional facility has another 533 inmates.

Jackson-Maldonado is one of only two juveniles currently held in the jail.

The other is a juvenile male, Kveon Jiles, 16, who is charged with second-degree murder with a firearm and being a minor in possession of a firearm. Jiles is accused of shooting LaRoyce J. Covington on July 21 in DeLand. Before his death, Covington told police that he was shot by Jiles, who was his nephew, according to a charging affidavit.

Jackson-Maldonado does not interact with Jiles. She did interact at one point with a juvenile female, but that juvenile is no longer at the jail.

This article originally appeared on The Daytona Beach News-Journal: Teen girl accused of shooting at Volusia deputies appears before judge
 

ThaBurgerPimp

Rising Star
BGOL Patreon Investor
Blackburn asked the teen if she understood what her attorney was requesting.

"He's requesting to continue the case. He's not quite ready to set it for trial at this point?" Blackburn asked Jackson-Maldonado.

The teen nodded and said "yes."
This how the movie itself could open..after she says yes,then the freeze-frame.."I know,you're wondering why i'm in a prison jumpsuit..." :lol:
 

Politic Negro

Rising Star
BGOL Investor

Teen girl who shot at deputies reaches plea deal; gets 20 years in prison​

State Attorney's Office says Jackson-Maldonado was the 'ringleader' in shootout​

Frank Fernandez
The Daytona Beach News-Journal

Nicole Jackson-Maldonado, the 15-year-old girl who shot at deputies after running away from a children's home, reached a plea deal Friday that will send her to state prison for 20 years.

It was a very different sentence from her co-defendant, a 12-year-old boy who could be released from a juvenile facility within three years. However, in a release sent following the announcement, the State Attorney's Office said Jackson-Maldonado was the "primary shooter" and "ringleader" that night.

Jackson-Maldonado stood before Circuit Judge Elizabeth Blackburn
Judge-Elizabeth-A.-Blackburn.jpg
Friday at the S. James Foxman Justice Center in Daytona Beach as Volusia County Sheriff Mike Chitwood and several deputies sat in the gallery.

Jackson-Maldonado was sentenced to 20 years in state prison followed by 40 years of probation; that has been the offer from prosecutors for months and they did not budge.

Jackson-Maldonado received credit for 607 days in the county jail.

Jackson-Maldonado appeared to be confused at times during the hearing. After the judge pronounced her sentence based on the plea agreement, she asked the judge if she would be released on Jan. 27. Apparently, she meant Jan. 27 more than a decade from now, but it was unclear.

The judge told her the Department of Corrections would calculate her gain time and determine her exact release date.

Judge Blackburn entered an order allowing her to see a mental health counselor.

Jackson-Maldonado answered "yes ma'am" to many of the judge's questions.

Blackburn went through a standard list of questions and warnings to people entering a plea. She told Jackson-Maldonado that if she was not a U.S. citizen she could be deported.

"Am I a U.S. citizen?" Jackson-Maldonado asked.

After a few moments, Jackson-Maldonado said, "All I know was I was born in Puerto Rico."

The judge said that answered the question. People born in Puerto Rico are U.S. citizens.

"Will I be thrown in prison with everybody else or will I be placed in juvenile?" Jackson-Maldonado asked.

The judge said the Department of Corrections will place her in a facility based on her age.

"It is my understanding that the Department of Corrections is still bound by the laws that require juveniles to be kept separately," Blackburn said. "You will be in an adult facility."

The judge asked Assistant Public Defender Larry Avallone about the prison housing for the teen, but his response was inaudible in the gallery. Avallone has not responded to an email from The News-Journal about the question.

A few times during the hearing, Jackson-Maldonado looked down toward her juvenile public defender who was sitting to her right.

The night of the shootout with Volusia County deputies​

Jackson-Maldonado was 14 when she and the 12-year-old boy made national and international news after running away from the Florida United Methodist Children’s Home in Enterprise on June 1, 2021, breaking into a house, arming themselves with guns and shooting at responding deputies, according to charging affidavits. The two found the guns in the house.

Deputies initially held their fire, but shot Jackson-Maldonado when she came out of the house with a gun. Jackson-Maldonado was shot six times, including a grazing wound. No deputies were injured in the shootout.

Jackson-Maldonado faced a life prison sentence if convicted of attempted first-degree murder of a law enforcement officer (firearm), although, because she is a juvenile, the sentence would be reviewed after 25 years, at which point a judge could release her.

She also faced up to life in prison on the charge of burglary of a dwelling while armed. She was also charged with criminal mischief causing damage of $1,000 or more, a third-degree felony.

The plea deal amended the attempted first-degree murder of a law enforcement officer (firearm) to attempted first-degree murder (firearm). Prosecutors also waived a minimum mandatory of 20 years in prison.

Jackson-Maldonado pleaded no contest to the attempted first-degree murder with a firearm, burglary of a dwelling while armed and criminal mischief of $1,000 or more. She was adjudicated guilty.

The plea deal also took care of Jackson-Maldonado's cases in Flagler County where she was charged with five third-degree felonies in the burning of some wooded lots. She pleaded no contest to those charges and was also adjudicated guilty.

Different punishments for each offender​

Jackson-Maldonado's case was treated differently than the boy's.

Prosecutors kept the 12-year-old boy’s case in juvenile court and resolved it last year with a plea bargain that could free him within three years from a juvenile facility. But prosecutors have kept Jackson-Maldonado's case in adult court and offered her a very different deal. The News-Journal is not naming the boy because he was tried as a juvenile.

Volusia County Sheriff's Sgt. Don Maxwell had to take cover behind a tree during the incident as the children fired from the house. Bullets hit the tree as he stood behind it.

Maxwell attended the boy's sentencing and told the child that he prayed for him and that he forgave him.

“I remember you. I forgive you. I challenge you to be better,” Maxwell said to the boy during the sentencing in March. “I want to see you one day be the person … the person that I know you can be. You have a big heart. You have a long life ahead of you. And I will say a prayer for you every day.”

Maxwell has appeared at two previous hearings for Jackson-Maldonado to show that the prosecution was ready for trial. Maxwell has declined to comment when asked by The News-Journal about the different treatment of the boy versus the girl.

The News-Journal asked Chitwood the same question on Friday and he said it was the State Attorney's decision.

During Friday's hearing, Assistant State Attorney Sarah Thomas checked to see if Maxwell or any other law enforcement officer present wanted to make a statement. They did not.

'She is a child'​

Craig Trocino, a professor at the University of Miami School of Law who is not involved in the case, repeated in a phone interview Friday that Jackson-Maldonado's case should not be in adult court.

"It's sad. This is a child. Whether the state wants to create a fiction that, for the purposes of this crime, we are going to treat her as an adult. She is a child. That will not change," Trocino said. "I think there's a failure to recognize that. And she's a child that's desperately in need of services and didn't get them. And the state being intransigent in its offer in its ability to work this out and balance the idea of punishment with the services that this child so desperately needs wasn't happening and so it gets resolved in this way."

Both Jackson-Maldonado and the boy had previously been Baker Acted, in which a person is taken into custody for psychiatric evaluation if they are considered a threat to themselves or others.

Jackson-Maldonado has lived in group homes or at the Children’s Home in Enterprise. It’s unclear where her parents are. The teenager has a group of supporters who have become interested in her welfare after reading or watching media accounts of the case.

State Attorney R.J. Larizza's office did not respond to an email from The News-Journal about the different treatment of the two children.

Larizza's office issued a press release Friday afternoon that stated on the day of the incident, Jackson-Maldonado attacked a worker at the First United Methodist Children's Home and fled. She was followed by the boy, who was a non-criminal juvenile resident, the release stated. An employee of the children's home followed them, and Jackson-Maldonado attacked and threatened to kill that employee, according to the release. The release does not provide details of either attack.

The release stated that "forensic and eyewitness testimony identified Jackson-Maldonado as the primary shooter and ringleader of the criminal episode."

The release states that after numerous efforts to get Jackson-Maldonado to exit, she continued to fire.

"Ultimately, Jackson-Maldonado exited the residence and fired a shotgun at the deputies while approaching them. Deputies were forced to return fire," according to the release from Larizza's office.

The release states that deputies raced Jackson-Maldonado to an awaiting ambulance for medical care and states it was due to deputies' "heroic efforts" that no one died.

Trocino said the girl was in need of services and the state's claims that she was a ringleader, along with the other allegations, are further evidence that she needed help.

“The fact that they are claiming that she’s a ringleader is not by itself a justification to treat her so radically different than the other,” he said.


Judge closes hearing​

Jackson-Maldonado was originally scheduled for a “Nelson hearing” on Friday concerning her request to dismiss her attorneys.

Judge Blackburn closed the hearing to the public, the media and prosecutors, citing an effort to protect Jackson-Maldonado's right to a fair trial. Blackburn said the motion to dismiss her attorneys would require discussing confidential issues, including trial strategy.

When the public, the media and the prosecutors were allowed back in, the judge said that Jackson-Maldonado had withdrawn her request to dismiss her attorneys. The judge also said that Jackson-Maldonado had on her own initiative stated she wanted to agree to the plea deal.

'We are not punching bags'​

"You can't shoot at the police," Volusia County Sheriff Mike Chitwood
Sheriff-Chitwood.jpg
said after the plea deal was announced. "You just can't do it. Somebody's got to stand up for law enforcement. We are not punching bags. It doesn't matter what the age is. This is a horrific event for all of us. Thank God my deputies went home. Within seconds of her being shot, deputies did life-saving first aid to save her life. And now here we are today, sadly she was sentenced. And I wish her all the luck in the world. My deputies went home. She now has to pay the price. And hopefully she'll get out of jail and be a productive member of society."

A News-Journal reporter mentioned the 12-year-old boy who also fired at police, but Chitwood did not respond.

When asked during the press conference whether her case should have remained in juvenile court, Chitwood said that was the State Attorney's decision.

"Those decisions from day one are the State Attorney's decision," Chitwood said. "We just wanted people held accountable. That's all we ask for. The state was fantastic with us, met with us, met with deputies, got their input when they went forward. The bottom line is you can't shoot at the cops."

Jackson-Maldonado speaks out:Calling from Volusia jail, girl accused of firing at deputies says it was a 'stupid mistake'

'Bonnie and Clyde':Girl who escaped group home shot after opening fire on deputies

'I'm all for not killing kids but'Examining the runaways gunfight: 'I'm all for not killing kids but ... we need to do something'
 
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Politic Negro

Rising Star
BGOL Investor
So if a 14 yr old killed a bunch of people in a mass shooting you don’t believe they don’t deserve life?
We're going to find out how true that is with the Austin Thompson mass murder and shootout with the police in NC. It's been 7 months and they still haven't charged anyone yet.
 

godofwine

Supreme Porn Poster - Ret
BGOL Investor
CAC boy just threw his life away for THAT..?
Hey man, when you're 12, pussy is pussy. Fat, ugly, bull dagger looking, if a girl is willing to give you some pussy or even show you some titties you'll be willing to jump over a moon

I'm just mad they missed the cops. They should have killed them bitches. Perfectly good chance to shoot some cops and you miss. That deserves 20 years in itself
 

lightbright

Master Pussy Poster
BGOL Investor
CAC boy just threw his life away for THAT..?
Hey man, when you're 12, pussy is pussy. Fat, ugly, bull dagger looking, if a girl is willing to give you some pussy or even show you some titties you'll be willing to jump over a moon

I'm just mad they missed the cops. They should have killed them bitches. Perfectly good chance to shoot some cops and you miss. That deserves 20 years in itself

The power of pussy..... remains undefeated among heterosexuals

:itsawrap:



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M.H.C.

5280
BGOL Investor
No way a 14 year old should get 20 years
That’s very fucking disgusting
You’re right….it is disgusting. Should’ve been 40 years. The fuck? Treat life like a game if you want to. Shoot at a cop(lucky she alive) she’ll shoot anything. Anything including schools and public venues. Get her the fuck outta there
 

lightbright

Master Pussy Poster
BGOL Investor
You’re right….it is disgusting. Should’ve been 40 years. The fuck? Treat life like a game if you want to. Shoot at a cop(lucky she alive) she’ll shoot anything. Anything including schools and public venues. Get her the fuck outta there
:wepraise::wepraise::wepraise:
 
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