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Teen pulling prank killed by neighbor
The Palm Beach Post ^ | Sunday, October 26 | Sarah Eisenhauer and Cynthia Kopkowski

Posted on 10/26/2003 4:41:29 AM PST by lifacs

Sunday, October 26

Teen pulling prank killed by neighbor

By Sarah Eisenhauer and Cynthia Kopkowski, Palm Beach Post Staff Writers Sunday, October 26, 2003

A birthday celebration capped off by an early-morning round of mischievous doorbell ringing ended in the death of a Boca Raton-area teenager early Saturday after a neighbor who believed his home was about to be burgled shot and killed the boy, deputies said.

Mark Andrew Drewes, a popular Pope John Paul II High School sophomore who celebrated his 16th birthday at a party Friday night, died from a single gunshot wound at Delray Medical Center. The shooting occurred shortly after 12:30 a.m. in the Woodbury neighborhood, a quiet, upper middle class neighborhood in the Boca Del Mar region.

The man who shot Drewes, Jay Steven Levin, 40, was not arrested, Palm Beach County sheriff's spokeswoman Diane Carhart said. Investigators questioned Levin at his home at 6115 Woodbury Road and collected evidence but did not take him into custody, Carhart said.

"He's a homeowner there," she said. "He was very cooperative."

The Palm Beach County State Attorney's Office will review the evidence and determine whether Levin's actions were justifiable self-defense or grounds for criminal charges, spokesman Mike Edmondson said.

When Levin, a Palm Beach County businessman who lived alone, was awakened from his sleep by a knock at the door early Saturday, he armed himself with a handgun and answered it, deputies said. He told deputies he saw someone he believed was holding a weapon.

Levin fired one shot, hitting Drewes, according to deputies. The boy ran into a neighbor's yard and collapsed.

"He feared for his life," Carhart said of Levin, adding that the teenager was 6-feet-2 and 210 pounds. "So he's a big 16-year-old."

Gathered at a family member's home Saturday morning, Drewes' relatives disputed Levin's self-defense claim and said they were furious that he was not arrested and charged with a crime Saturday.

"How can they call that self-defense?" said a family member who asked not to be identified. "If they thought it was a burglar, what kind of burglar knocks?"

The previous night, the large family and a bunch of friends had gathered at the house on Woodbury, where the Drewes have lived for about 10 years, for birthday cake. The teenager had been eagerly looking forward to three things: his 16th birthday, when he would be able to trade in his learner's driving permit for the real thing; the family party; and his school's homecoming dance Saturday.

"It was such a good day," said his grandmother Patricia Drewes, who drove from her Stuart home for the birthday party. "He was so happy. He told me it was the best day of his life."

Throughout the evening Friday, Drewes and his friends darted back and forth between his home and the fall festival at nearby St. Jude Catholic Church and school, where he graduated from eighth grade two years ago.

About 11:30 p.m., Drewes and a friend decided to go for a walk, family members said.

"They were playing knock on the door and run," said one family member. "They were being silly. They weren't bad kids."

Family members said the teen who was with Drewes told them he was not holding anything in his hand.

Investigators did not find a weapon on the victim, Carhart said. They confiscated Levin's handgun as evidence, she said.

Carhart said ringing doorbells and running is not generally considered to be a crime.

Family contends teen was shot in back

The sheriff's office would not release the name of the teenager who was with Drewes Saturday morning. Nor would it confirm the family's assertion that morgue officials told them Saturday afternoon that Drewes was shot in the back.

Carhart said the sheriff's office did not know when an autopsy was to take place.

A shirtless and red-eyed Levin answered the door to his neatly landscaped home Saturday morning, but said only, "I can't talk to you," in response to a reporter's questions.

State records show Levin ran his own business called Caxin Consulting Inc. from his home since 2001. He filed papers dissolving that corporation in August. Before that, he was listed as president of two other businesses, which are now inactive, the Halifax Group Inc. and L&L Accounting Inc.

Levin has a concealed weapons permit, according to state records.

He has lived at 6115 Woodbury, which has a market value of $195,000, since December 1996, according to county property appraiser records. It's on the next block from the Drewes home, several houses up the street.

Levin's doorbell was not the only one the boys rang Saturday morning. Residents up and down the 6100 block of Woodbury reported being awakened by ringing doorbells and knocks shortly after midnight. Most said they sloughed it off or answered the door, found nobody there and went back to bed. But a second round of frantic pounding and shouting from Drewes' friend minutes later caught their attention.

"It was pounding, pounding," said Lauren Hahn, one of several residents who talked to the boy through her front door, then called 911. "He said 'Call 911. My friend's been shot.' He was hysterical."

Droopy-eyed neighbors repeated the same story as they gathered Saturday morning in small groups up and down the block, some just a few yards away from blood stains where Drewes fell.

Carol Quiroga, who lives across the street from Levin, heard nothing outside as she made her way to bed minutes before the shooting -- no arguing, no scuffling. A loud "pop," broke the silence, followed by someone saying calmly, "Call 911" once, then again, she said. What sounded like a boy's voice came next, saying "Help. I need help."

She expressed the same disbelief shared by Drewes' family and several neighbors.

"What is so important that you are defending that you need a gun?" said Quiroga, the mother of two teenage boys, before breaking into tears.

"Teenage boys do things like that," she said.

Determining whether Levin's actions were protected by the state's self-defense laws now falls to State Attorney Barry Krischer's office. Someone can use force to protect his home if he think it's being burgled, Edmondson said, but it can only equal the force he's being threatened by.

And that law doesn't generally protect homeowners who use deadly force against someone coming into their yards or on their sidewalks, Edmondson said. That's considered trespassing.

"A trespass would not constitute a breach of someone's safety," he said.

If Krischer's office determines that Levin acted legally, the case is closed, Edmondson said. If the state attorney believes it was an unjustified killing, worthy of a second-degree murder charge or a lesser offense, he will charge Levin. If the evidence isn't clear-cut and could point to a first-degree murder charge, then Krischer will refer it to the grand jury, Edmondson said.

A man in Louisiana was cleared of wrongdoing in 1993 after he shot a Halloween-costumed Japanese exchange student knocking on his door looking for a party in 1992. He turned himself in after a grand jury had indicted him on charges of manslaughter in the killing of Yoshihiro Hattori of Nagoya, Japan. Hattori's friend testified in the trial that he was carrying a camera when they knocked on Rodney Peairs' door.

A shattered Drewes family Saturday described Mark as an A student and soccer player, the type of kid who easily made friends with just about everyone he met. More relatives from Brazil are expected to arrive today, along with Mark's father, Gregory, who is captain of a private yacht and was in France Saturday.

Many of Drewes' classmates would learn of his death at Pope John Paul II High's homecoming dance Saturday night, said the Rev. Guy Fiano, the school's president. Counselors were scheduled to be on hand at the dance and Monday at the school, a Catholic private school attended by 925 students, including 250 in Drewes' sophomore class. A prayer service is planned Monday for the "very well loved" student, Fiano said.

"It's very, very sad," he said. "I think it's going to be a very stressful week."

Student called 'very polite, very respectful'

Word began to spread Saturday morning through St. Jude's festival, a few blocks from where the shooting occurred. Standing amid the cotton candy vendors and whirling carnival rides, several attendees recalled the slain teenager as friendly and well-liked.

Classmate Danielle Denofa, 16, put her hand over her mouth and gasped when she heard the news.

"He was really nice," said Denofa, who attended YMCA teen camp with Drewes this summer. "I can't believe that happened."

Tracy McCarver, who taught Drewes math at St. Jude Catholic School, remembered him as a "very polite, very respectful" youngster with "a good sense of humor."

After this afternoon's youth Mass at St. Jude, members of his Life Teen group, a faith-based social organization, are expected to attend a special meeting, said Kevin Cleary, the church's religious education director and youth minister.

"Everyone's in a state of shock because of the senselessness of it," he said. "He was a boy's boy."

He called Drewes a "delightful" young man who could be relied on to help with every pancake breakfast, raffle and car wash that cropped up on his youth group's schedule. Before every Sunday night Life Teen meeting, Drewes was there setting up tables, Cleary said. When they ended, Drewes stayed to clean up.

"He was a beautiful, beautiful boy," said his aunt, Renata Piza. "He goes to church every week. He was so excited about turning 16."

Grandmother Drewes said he always greeted her on the phone by saying, "I love you, Nana."

"He's what you'd call the ideal son, just too good to be true," she said. "If there was some way I could understand this. It was so pointless."

sarah_eisenhauer@pbpost.com,cynthia_kopkowski@pbpost.com


TOPICS: Crime/Corruption; Culture/Society; News/Current Events; US: Florida
KEYWORDS: banglist; concealed; dead; handgun; nosense; permit; poorkid; shot; trespass; weapons
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To: lifacs
I'm going to suspend judgement on this one bearing more facts .... was the boy shot in the back for one ?
381 posted on 10/26/2003 6:11:52 PM PST by Centurion2000 (Virtue untested is innocence)
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To: muawiyah
Really? WHere did he/she say he/she was a witness to the shooting? Please show me the quote because I missed it.
382 posted on 10/26/2003 6:12:40 PM PST by Freedom2specul8 (Please pray for our troops.... http://anyservicemember.navy.mil/)
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To: gatex
Actually yes I do because I spoke with the kid who was with Mark today. He told me what he could, and I have been to the scene. I know the distance between the shooter's house and where Mark fell. I know what the shooter's house looks like. I knew the kid. I know what they were doing. Do you know all that?
383 posted on 10/26/2003 6:14:15 PM PST by durham62
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To: gatex
Actually yes I do because I spoke with the kid who was with Mark today. He told me what he could, and I have been to the scene. I know the distance between the shooter's house and where Mark fell. I know what the shooter's house looks like. I knew the kid. I know what they were doing. Do you know all that?
384 posted on 10/26/2003 6:15:42 PM PST by durham62
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To: muawiyah
"..you might find yourself pulling a little time in Florida for having tried to intimidate someone who might be called in by the Prosecutor as a witness."

He was not a witness. He said he was a friend.

385 posted on 10/26/2003 6:16:20 PM PST by gatex
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To: durham62
"...I know what they were doing..."

No you don't --- you only know what your friend told you (hearsay -- and not allowed in couarta, I dont think)--- and he has a serious interest in saying they were only doing innocent things.

386 posted on 10/26/2003 6:19:32 PM PST by gatex
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To: gatex
That's what I thought...

Regardless, the investigators have more info than the folks who were at the vigil.

387 posted on 10/26/2003 6:19:32 PM PST by Freedom2specul8 (Please pray for our troops.... http://anyservicemember.navy.mil/)
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To: durham62
I know what they were doing.

You were there?

Something you would like to confess maybe?

388 posted on 10/26/2003 6:20:12 PM PST by Harmless Teddy Bear (Maybe I should cut back on the coffee...)
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To: gatex
Friends frequently end up being called as witnesses for various purposes. Why risk going to jail over it. Just leave the guy alone. The facts will all come out.
389 posted on 10/26/2003 6:20:33 PM PST by muawiyah
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To: durham62
With a window beside the door, then the scenario remains confusing to me.

The narrow walkway you describe doesn't leave much hiding room. So if Levin looked out the window first one would have to assume he saw Mark. If the sight of Mark concerned Levin why did he open the door?

I'm sure others have different questions, but were I a prosecutor or jury member a lot of how I interpret this scenario would depend on the answer to that question.
390 posted on 10/26/2003 6:21:51 PM PST by not_apathetic_anymore
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To: gatex
I never said I was going to be testifying in court. Plus the only people I consider friends are people who tell me the truth. By the way, the way the crime scene looks completely verifies my friend's "hearsay".
391 posted on 10/26/2003 6:22:09 PM PST by durham62
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To: durham62
Can you point to a quote on this thread that says the homeowner had the right to shoot Mark? I'm seeing more people ask questions about the circumstances rather than patting the homeowner on the back. I'm asking because I haven't read one yet...and since we're all humans and make mistakes, I could have overlooked a quote here and there.
392 posted on 10/26/2003 6:22:10 PM PST by Freedom2specul8 (Please pray for our troops.... http://anyservicemember.navy.mil/)
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To: alisasny
Isn't there a huge space between condoning behavior and believing it should result in death?
393 posted on 10/26/2003 6:22:26 PM PST by stands2reason ("What you see at fight club is a generation of men raised by women." -- Chuck Palahniuk)
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To: Harmless Teddy Bear
Yea I'd love to confess they were playing a game that regardless of the age you played it at is common among teenagers, and not meant to harm anyone.
394 posted on 10/26/2003 6:23:41 PM PST by durham62
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To: muawiyah
If the homeowner is convicted...his friend (if this person is who he says he is) could be called during the sentencing phase. All I see is a person pointing at freepers as if they are glad the boy got shot. It's Sickening. My apologies if I've offended anyone.
395 posted on 10/26/2003 6:24:31 PM PST by Freedom2specul8 (Please pray for our troops.... http://anyservicemember.navy.mil/)
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To: lifacs; firebrand; Cacique
Mark Andrew Drewes, a popular Pope John Paul II High School sophomore.

I am ashamed to say that this idiot was a student at my alma mater. Please don't judge an otherwise fine institution by the behavior of this fool.

BTW: Its interesting that even in the center of tranplanted New York liberalism, there are still people exercising their right to bear arms.

396 posted on 10/26/2003 6:25:35 PM PST by Clemenza (East side, West side, all around the town. Tripping the light fantastic on the sidewalks of New York)
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To: durham62
"...the way the crime scene looks completely verifies my friend's "hearsay" ...."

What does your friend say about the shooting ?

397 posted on 10/26/2003 6:26:36 PM PST by gatex
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To: lifacs; Cacique; firebrand
BTW: I still think a warning that the homeowner was armed would have been sufficient without pulling the trigger. The kid was still stupid to do this, however.
398 posted on 10/26/2003 6:27:24 PM PST by Clemenza (East side, West side, all around the town. Tripping the light fantastic on the sidewalks of New York)
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To: muawiyah
Waving your arms about is not, in almost anyplace but Louisiana, a death penalty offense.

What does the death penalty have to do with self-defense? Oh yea, nothing. Rape, mugging are not capital offences either but they can get you killed just like jumping off a cliff or charging an armed homeowner pretending to attack him.

Last thing I saw on this particular issue the Louisiana state legislature refused to change the law

Good. How would they change the law? Lets see, something like this: "If a young man charges you waving his arms wildly, ignoring the gun being pointed at them and your orders to freeze, you are to assume they are just pretending and not shoot them."

I would prefer implementing and an entrance exam for exchange students with one question:

1. You go around side of a strangers house and try to open the side/back door. A woman screams inside. You run around to the front and a man is point a gun at you, yelling something you don't fully understand. You should...

a. stop moving toward him.

b. apologize

c. Wave your arms wildy while charging at him.

d. Answers a and b.

If they answer c don't let them in. This way, the rest of the popluation can go on protecting themselfs from criminals.

399 posted on 10/26/2003 6:28:47 PM PST by On the Road to Serfdom
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To: Clemenza
I am very ashamed that an alumnus of my school would say something so ignorant and despicable towards a murdered student. You know what our town and school are like, and I'm sure your classmates and friends if not you did many of the same things Mark did just by having fun.
400 posted on 10/26/2003 6:29:28 PM PST by durham62
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