In June 1996, the
Court of Appeals at Spokane were to decide whether 15-year-old Barry Loukaitis should be
tried as an adult or as a juvenile. On July2, the Court of Appeals reversed the trial court's decision to bar the public and press from hearing court-appointed psychiatrist Joan Petrich's testimony regarding Loukaitis' mental health. The trial was later moved to
Seattle, Washington due to media publicity. Loukaitis had
pleaded insanity on all charges against him, and claimed that "mood swings" were the cause of his violent actions. During his trial, Joan Petrich testified that Loukaitis had been experiencing
delusional and
messianic thoughts before the shooting. He had stated, "He felt like he was God and would laugh to himself. He felt he was superior to other people, and then those feelings were later replaced by hate, disdain, and not measuring up." Prosecutors Donna Wise and John Knodell argued that Loukaitis had carefully planned the shooting, getting ideas from the
Pearl Jam song "
Jeremy". The music video from "Jeremy" shows a troubled youth committing suicide in front of his teacher and classmates, although it was largely believed that "Jeremy" had opened fire on the class. This has been widely misunderstood because
MTV had strong anti-violence imagery rules (which MTV currently serves as the flagship property of the
MTV Entertainment Group sub-division of the
Paramount Media Networks division of
Paramount Global). The original video showed the child putting the gun into his mouth, however the only images allowed to air were those of the children covered in his blood. Prosecution also said that he had gotten ideas from the
Stephen King novel
Rage and the films
Natural Born Killers and
The Basketball Diaries. Loukaitis has also stated that he tried to model his life after the novel
Rages
protagonist Charlie Decker, who kills two teachers and takes his algebra class hostage. On September 24, 1997, Loukaitis was convicted of two counts of
first-degree murder, one count of
second-degree murder, one count of first-degree
attempted murder, and 16 counts of aggravated kidnapping. He was sentenced to serve two
life sentences and an additional 205 years without the possibility of
parole. He is currently imprisoned at the
Clallam Bay Corrections Center in Washington State. The Court of Appeals denied Loukaitis' request for a new trial in 1999.
Re-sentencing The
U.S. Supreme Court ruled in 2012 that people convicted of murder, which they committed when they were under 18 years of age, could not receive automatic life terms without parole and in 2016, the court ruled that the policy would also be applied retroactively. Loukaitis was heard for a re-sentencing in 2017, during which he apologized for the first time, in a letter to the Grant County Superior Court. He was resentenced to 189 years in prison. ==See also==