Nebraska Supreme Court: Lincoln teen accused of murdering 16-year-old can be tried as an adult
The Nebraska Supreme Court has upheld the decision to try a 16-year-old boy as an adult in the fatal stabbing of a Lincoln teenager
File footage of the case (10/11).
LINCOLN, Neb. (KOLN) - The Nebraska Supreme Court has upheld the decision to try a 16-year-old boy as an adult in the fatal stabbing of a Lincoln teenager.
Attorneys for Stephen āMaxā DāAmore filed a motion in October 2024 to move his case to juvenile court. Judge Ryan Post ruled the case should stay in district court, and the Nebraska Court of Appeals later agreed.
DāAmore then appealed to the Nebraska Supreme Court, arguing the appeals court used the wrong legal test, court documents show. The Supreme Court disagreed and upheld the lower courtās decision.
DāAmore is charged with first-degree murder and use of a deadly weapon in the killing of 16-year-old Xavian Sawyer, who was found with two stab wounds to the chest at a home near North 64th and Adams streets on May 18, 2024.
Sawyer identified DāAmore as his attacker before he died, according to police. Officers believe the two boys had a prior disagreement that escalated at a gathering at DāAmoreās home.
DāAmore claims that he was not seeking conflict and felt cornered when the stabbing occurred. However, Judge Post wrote that DāAmore could be seen exiting his house with a knife and confronting an unarmed teen as he called 911.
āThe court can only infer the motivation here was in possible retaliation for the previous pepper spray incident that led to the argument between other individuals at the defendantās home,ā the judge wrote in his order.
DāAmore even acknowledged the stabbing in a video taken at the scene and instructed a witness to delete it, according to the order. The judge said he considered this evidence in his transfer denial.
The order referenced events in DāAmoreās life in the years leading up to Sawyerās death. Judge Post noted that DāAmore had a history of violent behavior, being referred for assault and vandalism charges on multiple occasions.
DāAmore had also missed roughly 150 days of school between three school years, the judge wrote. When he was at school, prosecutors say DāAmore engaged in fights, threatening behavior and sexual harassment. Court documents also suggest DāAmore associated with known gang members but was not part of a gang himself.
Judge Post noted that DāAmore had been through Juvenile Court before, and he found that the boy had not been receptive to redirection.
āThe defendant has shown he is unwilling to learn from past interactions with the juvenile justice system and has continued to show aggressive tendencies and outbursts,ā Judge Post wrote. āHis first response is aggression so he does not look weak.ā
DāAmore posted roughly $75,000 and was later released from the Lancaster County Youth Services Center on May 30, 2024. His bond, which was set at 10% of $750,000, also came with multiple conditions for his release.
DāAmore had his bond revoked in November and was taken into custody after the court found he had violated the ninth condition of his bond. The condition states DāAmore āshall not be involved, directly or indirectly, in unlawful or disorderly conduct or acts injurious to others.
Documents allege DāAmore was seen dancing to music in a video posted to social media. In the video, DāAmore allegedly used a vape and made a hand gesture of a gun when the song mentioned a pistol. Another person in the video, who was present at the scene of Sawyerās death, was reportedly holding a bottle of alcohol.
The judge changed the conditions of the bond and raised the amount to 10% of $1 million. On Nov. 15, 2024, he paid an additional $25,000 and was released once again.
After his bond was revoked and then paid up again, Judge Post said that was only when DāAmore was willing to undergo therapy. His therapist testified that he had since attended seven therapy sessions, but that he had been āvoluntoldā to do so.
