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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: StatesEnemy
Mans laughter?
81 posted on 10/26/2003 6:42:56 AM PST by pgobrien (Semper Gumby! (Always Flexible))
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To: Lion Den Dan; Squantos; AAABEST; Joe Brower; sit-rep; Sir Gawain; Travis McGee; chookter; ...
What say all of you?

IMHO the home owner probably over reacted, but none of us were there to see exactly what happened. The media is going to report this as liberally as possible. Was the kid shot in the back? No proof at this time, that will be established by a photo from the autopsy. Was there any instrument nearby which could easily ahve been mistaken for a weapon? I would hope I would wait until I felt an absolute threat, but considering the home owner had been wakened from sleep, how clearly was he thinking and reacting? I understand that when we take up arms the individual responsibility increases, I just hope the grand jury understands and reacts accordingly.
82 posted on 10/26/2003 6:43:25 AM PST by SLB ("We must lay before Him what is in us, not what ought to be in us." C. S. Lewis)
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To: beaversmom
"The boy was silly to be out ringing door bells at his age but he didn't deserve to die for it."

===

As an earlier poster aptly pointed out: "jay walkers don't deserve to die for it, but sometimes they do".

The point is the "kid" (I am actually getting tired of that excuse -- a 16 year old should know better and Malvo was a a 17 year old "kid", when he committed his deliberate sniping murders) could have lived a long happy life, if he didn't go knocking on the door in the middle of the night. And if he just "knocked and ran", he would have been long gone, by the time the homeowner opened the door. He engaged in something that put his own life at risk, and he lost. He made a wrong choice. Lot of people die for making the wrong choice at the wrong time. It's too bad, but it's a fact of life.
83 posted on 10/26/2003 6:44:05 AM PST by FairOpinion
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To: WorkingClassFilth
That's a good point--we can't rule out media bias here because we all know they hate guns and look for any reason to promote the cause. Strictly going by the facts presented here, I would side with he shouldn't have used deadly force but things may play out differently like you said.
84 posted on 10/26/2003 6:44:51 AM PST by beaversmom
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To: lifacs
"What is so important that you are defending that you need a gun?" EVERYTHING with-in the confines of my home that I've WORKED for and the lives of my family & myself, I guess that about covers it!!
85 posted on 10/26/2003 6:49:35 AM PST by Fighter@heart (Have Tag Line, Will Travel.......Contact Paladin)
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To: BOBWADE
The kids were ringing and running. There are other witnesses to their practice throughout the neighborhood.

If the kid was ringing and running, and the homeowner with the gun saw him face to face that would mean he was waiting for him to show up.

It is possible that as soon as the bell was rung the homeowner threw open the door and shot the kid as he was turning to run away.

That's a bit more than your typical second-degree murder.

If you think this guy was in the right, you might send him a donation or two, maybe sell your house and give him the proceeds. He's gonna' need it!

86 posted on 10/26/2003 6:49:45 AM PST by muawiyah
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To: elfman2
I think that the shooter needs to be able to demonstrate that there was an immanent threat to his life or property beyond reasonable doubt. Otherwise, I think that the benefit of the doubt should run against him, and he should be made an example of to people who have no business owning guns.

The only way to show beyond a reasonable doubt that there was a threat is to wake up dead or hospitalized in the morning.

The standard in my state (ND) is such that the use of lethal force be predicated on reasonable belief that the shooter is acting to avoid serious bodily injury or death, or intervening on behalf of a third party to prevent serious bodily injury to or death of that party. Even if the shooter is wrong about the situation, the reasonable belief becomes an affirmative defense.

Here, the question becomes one of 'Did the man believe he was being seriously threatened?'. We do not know if the man had recieved death threats, owed his bookie, etc. and felt this was the 'enforcer' come to collect.

It is a shame that the kid paid with his life for the stupidity of rousting people after midnight. The shooter will probably lose everything in a civil suit, even if he is acquitted.

As for shooting in the back, I didn't see in the article where anyone stated with certainty that this was the case.

87 posted on 10/26/2003 6:50:35 AM PST by Smokin' Joe
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To: coloradan
I'm in Colorado too. I was cleaning out my car the other day and found a toothpick and my dad shouted at me--"You shouldn't have that in the car! What if you got stopped by the police!?!" Of course he was joking but he does believe the police around here in Denver are trigger happy. He still goes on about the Truax case.
88 posted on 10/26/2003 6:51:37 AM PST by beaversmom
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To: Ditter
with all respect to your children and grandchildren, I have seen more than enough of such "good boys" tried and convicted as adults in the criminal courts. They all have mothers who come to court and say this or that was harmless or he just fell into a bad crowd.

His intent is the issue. Knocking/ringing/banging on a strangers door is suspect.

From a mischieviou "yout" I would say michief would dictate rining the bell and running away FAST!

89 posted on 10/26/2003 6:52:53 AM PST by longtermmemmory (Vote!)
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To: FairOpinion
Your screen name is most appropriate. Good analysis.
90 posted on 10/26/2003 6:52:59 AM PST by Badray (Molon Labe!)
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To: BlessedBeGod
And if he was just standing there, how on earth did he get shot in the back? Too many questions.

If he was shot in the back. Yes, there is more unknown than known right now. It won't surprise me if there's some history of bad blood between this family and the shooter. Not saying there is, just that there might be.

91 posted on 10/26/2003 6:55:19 AM PST by laredo44
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To: coloradan
Furthermore, the man's name is released, and curiously, even the value of his house

Think of the Palm Beach Post as a mirror image of the New York Times. They will eventually spin it into something like "See, even CCW permit holders can't handle guns correctly."

Not only was the man's name released, three pictures accompanied the story in the actual newpaper. A picture of his house, looks like it could be one of those zero lot line subdivision. A picture of a map of where his house is located and a picture of the boy shot (caucasian).

92 posted on 10/26/2003 6:58:04 AM PST by lifacs
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To: beaversmom
"I think the homeowner should have yelled out, "I've got a gun that I'm not afraid to use in one hand and a phone that I'm using to dial 911 in the other--get off my property now!"

You never do this. You just gave away your position if the burglar is armed. Your house walls will not stop the bullet coming towards you.
93 posted on 10/26/2003 6:58:35 AM PST by xusafflyer (Keep paying those taxes California. Mexico thanks you.)
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To: FairOpinion
FL requires that pedestrians use marked and signaled intersections where available. Those hit in the middle of a block when that type of intersection intersection is available are generally SOL.
94 posted on 10/26/2003 6:58:48 AM PST by longtermmemmory (Vote!)
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To: longtermmemmory
Do we know the race of the parties?

Does it change the facts of this case? I thought as conservatives we're supposed to be colorblind.

95 posted on 10/26/2003 7:01:01 AM PST by NittanyLion (Character Counts)
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To: longtermmemmory
Hey, along with all those suits against the family of the kid he shot, maybe he should put up a locking gate at the entrance to his property, remove his door bell so that no one is improperly led to the idea that they are welcome, and finally, post his property to warn off the unwary.

The fact that he has a door-bell means he welcomed visitors and bid them to let him know they were there so that he could come and spread his beneficence.

In this case he betrayed the trust folks had placed in him to abide by civilized norms. He's gonna' pay big time. Do they use "old sparky" down there or is it just an injection? Anybody know?

96 posted on 10/26/2003 7:01:31 AM PST by muawiyah
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To: Dick Vomer
Agreed--especially the last line. Here in ND you have to score 100% on the legal test, but not all your shots have to be in the 10 ring on the practical. That hammers home what is at stake legally. The bottom line is that you don't want to kill any innocents, by accident or design.
97 posted on 10/26/2003 7:01:53 AM PST by Smokin' Joe
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To: xusafflyer
The FL CCW class actually recomends you do this. Those words were specifically NOT recomended as they say you are scared. It was suggested you state "STOP, I have a gun." Just FYI as to what is said in class.

98 posted on 10/26/2003 7:02:56 AM PST by longtermmemmory (Vote!)
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To: lifacs
On New Year's Eve my cousin was dropped off by a friend at around 3am. He lived in a condo and they all looked the same. His friend dropped him off at the wrong condo and my cousin tried his key in the door. When it didn't work, he left. He was then shot in the back by a shotgun by the owner. He was found dead on the front lawn in the morning.
99 posted on 10/26/2003 7:03:13 AM PST by Hillary's Lovely Legs (I have a plan. I need a dead monkey, empty liquor bottles and a vacuum cleaner.)
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To: FairOpinion
I understand your point but I guess I'm not so c'est la vie about the boy's life looking at the facts as presented in the article (which I've already acknowledged may not be complete or accurate). I'm sure the guy being a gun owner had his door locked so he had a couple of seconds/minutes to think about his course of action. The article may not be accurate and maybe it will come out the boy was a punk with a history of harrassing this guy, but I don't think it's going to come out that he was actually in the house. The way I'm looking at it right now, the homeowner had a few seconds to think. My dad is a gun owner and I've had to make a couple late night trips knocking at his door. He would never shoot first and ask questions later even if it was someone he didn't recognize that was knocking at his door late.
100 posted on 10/26/2003 7:04:10 AM PST by beaversmom
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