He Got 30 Years for Murder After a Cop Killed His Friend
Lakeith Smith's case epitomizes the issues with the "felony murder" doctrine.

Lakeith Smith has been behind bars since he was 15 years old. He will be there for quite a while longer, having been convicted of murder in 2018. The catch: Prosecutors are certain he didn't kill anyone.
In February 2015, Smith and a group of teens carried out a series of daytime burglaries in Millbrook, Alabama, when residents weren't home. They were primarily looking for gaming systems. A neighbor phoned police when she noticed a car arrive at one house where she knew the owner to be out of town on business.
Law enforcement arrived shortly thereafter; one officer entered the home via the front door. His body camera was off, so the events immediately following remain somewhat unclear. But according to the government, at some point, a 16-year-old boy named A'Donte Washington shot at police. Washington then exited the home and darted out from the backyard fence, with a gun, at which point a different officer—whose body camera footage can be seen here—shot and killed him.
Prosecutors then charged Smith, along with three other teens who took part in the burglary, with Washington's murder.
That may sound upside-down. But under the felony murder rule, defendants can be prosecuted for the death of someone they didn't actually kill if that death occurs during the commission of other various felonies. Under Alabama's statute, those crimes include first-degree escape, robbery in any degree, and first- or second-degree burglary.
In other words, because Smith and his friends were present at the burglary, it is as if they all pulled the trigger and killed their friend. Smith was subsequently tried as an adult and sentenced to 65 years in prison: 30 years for murder, 15 years for burglary, and 10 years apiece for two theft convictions. (It was later reduced to 55 years.)
Part of that severity was a result of him exercising his Sixth Amendment right to a jury trial; the other boys accepted plea deals for far less prison time. Two of them, who are a year older than Smith, served 14 months. Even the original prosecutor on the case, C.J. Robinson, supported a resentencing hearing for Smith.
He got one last week. Judge Sibley Reynolds of the 19th Circuit allowed the sentences to run concurrently instead of consecutively, so Smith's punishment is the now the sentence he received for his murder conviction: 30 years.
Most states have some version of the felony murder rule. It's a little-known law that allows for broad application. Yet even with that wide berth and discretion, Smith's conviction may initially appear at odds with the text of Alabama's statute, which says that such charges may be brought if a person who participated in the underlying felony "causes the death of any person" and did so "in the course of and in furtherance of the crime that he/she [was] committing." Put differently, unless the government were to argue that the cop who shot Washington was an accomplice to the burglary and that he pulled the trigger as a part of carrying out that crime, then it would seem in contention with the law's intent.
But Alabama's Court of Criminal Appeals expanded the interpretation of its felony murder rule in a 2009 ruling, which set the scene for later convictions. That case, Witherspoon v. State of Alabama, centered around a duo who attempted to carry out an armed robbery at a gas station and who were promptly stopped by a store clerk with a gun. The cashier shot one of the robbers, Eric Baggett, who died. Baggett's co-conspirator, Jamie Marcus Witherspoon, was subsequently convicted of murdering him.
On appeal, Witherspoon argued that he couldn't have killed Baggett in the eyes of the law because, as the statute says, the clerk was not a part of the robbery. Had one of the robbers caused the death of, say, a customer, then felony murder charges would be fair game. But that wasn't the case.
In response, the court made a "logical leap," says Christine Field, an instructor of criminology and criminal justice at the University of Alabama. "The State established that Baggett would not have been killed but for the actions of Witherspoon and Baggett, who were participants in the robbery," wrote Justice Kelli Wise. "Because the actions of the participants in the robbery caused Baggett's death, Witherspoon was properly convicted of felony-murder." In other words, Witherspoon murdered Baggett by agreeing to rob the store with him.
"It's kind of bizarre the way that this went," Field tells Reason. "A plain reading [of the law] would appear to say…they're not talking about police or victims" killing someone who is committing a criminal act. That's especially true when considering the statute's second prong: "in the course of and in furtherance of the crime." Was the store clerk who shot Baggett furthering the robbery? Was the officer who shot Washington furthering the burglary?
The answer is obviously "no." But the decision in Witherspoon ruled solely on the "cause" prong and declined to address the furtherance piece altogether. That ambiguity has allowed prosecutors to continue pursuing charges against people like Lakeith Smith for breaking a law that it would appear they did not technically break.
"Right now, he's done about eight years in prison, and he didn't kill anyone," says Leroy Maxwell Jr., who represented Smith in his recent resentencing hearing. "The felony murder rule here in our state has sort of gone rogue."
It is not the only time where the rule has been used in puzzling ways. Last year, Vicky White, a correctional officer in Alabama, helped Casey White, a prisoner (with no relation), escape from the Lauderdale County Jail. When the police closed in on them, Vicky White killed herself. So the state turned around and charged Casey White with murdering her, because the two had committed a felony when they went on the run. This despite the fact that she shot herself in the head.
Alabama is also far from the only state with such prosecutions. In May of 2020, deputies with the Bonneville County Sheriff's Department in Idaho responded to a single-vehicle crash and a potential mental health crisis, as a woman named Jenna Holm was found standing in a dark, rural road with a machete. One of the responding officers had interacted with Holm a few days prior while she received help at the Behavioral Health Crisis Center in Idaho Falls. That officer ultimately tased Holm multiple times, subduing her.
Afterward, another officer, Deputy Wyatt Maser, crossed the street to handcuff Holm—at which point Sergeant Randy Flegel careened onto the scene in his patrol car, striking and killing Maser in the street.
Holm was charged with manslaughter.
She would go on to sit in jail for well over a year, awaiting trial on charges that she technically killed a man who died as she lay on the ground after having been repeatedly tased. But a judge ultimately threw out the charge—for the same reason that Smith's conviction may look odd: Maser was not killed by an agent of the underlying crime. (The offense, in this case, was Holm wielding a machete menacingly.)
Had Holm experienced her mental health crisis with an accomplice, and had that accomplice directly caused Maser's death, then the government could have proceeded. But Flegel—who is beyond a doubt the one who drove into Maser and killed him—was quite clearly not in cahoots with Holm. (An internal investigation, which the government attempted to conceal, concluded that the officers neglected to follow a slew of roadside safety protocols that evening, ultimately leading to Maser's demise.)
Holm's and Smith's similar cases and contrasting outcomes serve as somewhat of a microcosm for the debate that states across the country have had, and continue to have, about how to properly implement a felony murder rule without resulting in cases that border on parody. Idaho officially adopts what is known as the agency theory—where prosecutors cannot bring such charges against someone unless the death in question was caused by a participant in the related felony. But because of Alabama's decision in Witherspoon, that state employs the "proximate cause" theory, which makes no such specification and allows for prosecutions like Smith's.
"It was not corrected by the Legislature," adds Field.
In that vein, felony murder laws across the country have been the subject of intense scrutiny and amendment in recent years. Illinois, for example, recently reformed its law to follow the agency framework and made it so prosecutions like Smith's aren't possible. (Richly ironic is that Illinois' original felony-murder interpretation, prior to that reform, was cited by Alabama's Court of Criminal Appeals when it issued that fateful opinion in Witherspoon.) But another problem remains in places like Alabama: Such charges are treated on par with first-degree murder, which is defined by its intent to kill. Felony murder, on the other hand, is defined by the opposite. There is no intent.
Yet people convicted of felony murder still face the same ramifications. "You could charge someone with felony murder, but they shouldn't be sentenced on the same level as intentional murder, intentional rape, intentional sodomy, those sort of crimes," says Maxwell. "Lakeith [had] no intent to kill anyone, did not pull a trigger to kill anyone. However, he was punished on the same level as intentional murder, which carries in his situation 20 [years] to life in prison. So I think that right there is a major component that needs to be addressed."
It's not exactly a controversial proposal under our legal system, which already establishes gradations for murder based on aggravating factors—like intent. There's first-degree murder (a premeditated killing), second-degree murder (a crime of passion), and manslaughter (an unlawful killing without intent). The government agrees that felony murder is arguably most like door No. 3. And yet, in some states, it's punished as if it's the same as door No.1.
"I come from a background where I was taught that words mean things," says Field. "This is bananas."
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Difficult to generate a lot of sympathy in this case.
It is, and it isn't, depending on which set of circumstances you're looking at.
He was breaking into houses. Breaking things and stealing things.
His friend had a loaded firearm. His friend shot at the police.
On the other hand, he was underage. He did not apparently have a weapon, it's possible he didn't know his friend did. He didn't use the weapon or shoot at the police, and he obviously didn't shoot his friend. Also, there's the disparity in sentencing for the plea deal vs. not:
"Part of that severity was a result of him exercising his Sixth Amendment right to a jury trial; the other boys accepted plea deals for far less prison time. Two of them, who are a year older than Smith, served 14 months."
Which I think is the bigger issue in this particular story. The 'trial penalty'. Not that I'm generally a fan of the 'felony murder' rule in general, at least how it's applied. It makes more sense when you're applying it to accomplices when a victim is hurt, not when you're applying it to accomplices when another accomplice is hurt.
Anyway, 55 years seems like an awful long time for a 15 year old doing something stupid.
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Cause he's a colored boy, amirite, mio blanco amigo?
Yeah white armed robbers are so lovable, shreek.
Are you a spic on this sock, guv’nah?
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He went a-robbing with "friends" who carried guns and shot at police. Far as I'm concerned, any violent robbery includes the implied threat of the victim's death at the hands of the robber. That makes all violent robbers an existential threat, and if the robber dies from self-defense, that is a good result. It may not justify 65 or 55 years in jail for a 15 year old, but I am not going to weep for his felony murder conviction.
Don't play stupid games with stupid people in stupid places.
Your are so right! Every action taken and decision made by a 15 year old should be judged by the same standard as you would be. Because your maturity is equal, I guess.
We have special provisions for the developmentally disabled like yourself, shreek. Normally-developed 15 year olds are sufficiently cognizant to know that breaking into homes with your armed friends to steal people's stuff and kill them if they try to stop you is wrong.
Bad facts make for bad law. This is a good law based on the facts presented - you let a gun be introduced into your parlor games, you live with the consequences. I got a chuckle when they wrote the cretins who cooperated got reduced sentences.
Fuck him, but same as Trump you shouldn't charge people with crimes they didn't commit. Armed burglary though should be a 20-25 year sentence, so let him out when he's 35-40 years old.
Except he's one of the people involved in the attempted murder as well. That his friend was the one killed in the shootout with police doesn't mitigate the risk they chose to create when they went out to rob others (and apparently murder anyone who resisted).
Did he or one of his accomplice pull the trigger, no? Then I don't think they are guilty. Now if the cop had shot at one of them and the cops bullet hit a bystander, this perp should be legally culpable for bystander; but not a fellow accomplice. ln my mind the murdered perp doesn't get some form of justice for their murder, they assumed the risk by doing the deed.
Trump has committed hundreds of crimes. Unfortunately, he's escaped justice for most of them.
It's too bad that 100 million dollars and 5 years worth of federal investigation didn't turn one up, shreek. Maybe you could claim that he hacked your computer and posted those dark web links to hardcore child pornography that got your Sarah Palin's Buttplug account banned. Child pornography is illegal.
Mens rea? Who needs it?
DAs prosecuting hate crimes.
You mean the mens rea to commit armed robbery?
Rule of law?
No court should be expanding the scope of criminal liability beyond the text of the statute.
They didn't you retarded sack of shit. The felony murder rule is well defined statutorily. Nobody is arguing the charge was not statutorily justified, they're bitching that the poor dindu got a harsher sentence than his buddies who pled out.
The Alabama law states that, for it to be felony murder, the person who caused the death must have “participated in the underlying felony” and the death must have been “in the course of and in furtherance of the crime that he/she was committing.” The person who caused the death is a cop, and therefore did not participate in the crime and the death was not in furtherance of the crime that he/she was committing. They convicted him anyway because the court expanded the scope of liability beyond the text of the statute.
It is possible that Reason is taking things out of context, but the Alabama state government website which the actual law is on won't load so I just have to take Reason's word for it.
Congratulations, this is the first time you've used the term "mens rea" when it was even tangentially related to the actual topic under discussion. I still don't think you understand what it means, but the odds finally broke in your favor.
Which would strongly suggest the legislature does not agree that it needs "correcting", no?
Whether the court in 2009 got the original intent of the statute correct, there were many years for the legislature to change the statute, and it didn't. And this particular felon's crime was committed in 2015, so it's not like this was a post-facto redefinition of the law that caught him.
It’s a little-known law
Yeah, teaching the felony murder rule is so complicated. It’s not like in can be summed up in a single sentence like, “If somebody dies while you’re perpetrating a crime, you can potentially be charged with their murder.”
Better to replace it with more succinct, broadly applicable, and concrete topics like CRT or gender theory.
Seriously, who, at this point, isn’t aware of the felony murder rule?
Everyone has to learn something for the first time. Didn’t you? Or were you born with this knowledge.
Maybe mad.casual was out burglarizing houses on that day of 4th grade civics like poor li'l dindu here.
A little of both as well as options you left out of your false dichotomy.
For instance, I didn't exactly learn whether you were born this stupid, whether it takes effort on your part to be this stupid, or if it just comes naturally, but regardless, you've made it self-evident.
Regardless, charging a 15yo as an adult is invidious and should be unconstitutional.
Be he would be old enough to decide to cut his dick off and not tell his parents.
English common law had a rule of sevens.
Under 7, always a child.
7-14, a rebuttable assumption of being a child.
14-21, a rebuttable assumption of being an adult.
Over 21, always an adult.
I'd say burglary in a gang with a gun knocks that rebuttable assumption ass over teakettle.
I'd say you don't know if he knew there was a gun. I'm sure your little hoodlum friends always told you when they were carrying, amirite?
Hey shreek, you know how you're always mystified when your socks get called out 15 minutes after you make them? Replying from the wrong handle when you're operating two socks in the same thread is one of those giveaways. Hth.
You raise a great point though. Most 15 year olds running in a criminal gang committing armed robbery are just poor li'l boys whut wuz tryna turn they life around. How wuz they tuh know they wuz gunz and shieeet?
So true shreek! 15 is old enough to vote and fuck, but certainly not to be held criminally liable for armed robbery.
What do you supposed those burglars, armed with at least one gun, planned on doing to a homeowner if they happened to run into one? They were willing to shoot at cops. My sympathy meter is low.
They wuz gud boys! They wuz turnin' they life around! They wuz all gonna go to college! They juss got mixed up wit da wrong crowd!
I haven't heard the libertarian argument against this in a convincing manner, but I don't take issue with it. Robbery is a violent act. When robberies go wrong, use of force is expected. Even if you don't "intend" to kill someone, since when do we care about intent beyond classifying different degrees of murder?
I think it's reasonable to say that anyone choosing to rob should be held liable if their unhinged teammates kill someone. If you're going to rob someone, you better make damn sure you vet your crew and don't bring guns and hope nobody has an itchy trigger finger. Otherwise, that's your responsibility for partaking. Don't want to risk a murder charge? Don't rob.
Cuz collective punishment is wonderful, amirite Herr AChildSeeking?
I dunno shreek, why don't we ask the J6 protestors? I'm referring to the ones who've been in jail for 3 years without bail for trespassing, not the ones that were summarily shot in the face for trespassing, of course.
They've been in jail for three years for something that happened two years ago? Pretty good trick. The people sitting in jail did more than just trespass.
Something I heard or read a long time ago: When Britain had the death penalty, members of a gang would search each other before committing a crime, to ensure that none of them had a gun, as they didn’t want to be executed if someone died during their crime.
But none of the accomplices killed anyone. The cop killed one of the accomplices in self-defence. And the Alabama law only classifies something as felony murder if the person who caused the death participated in the underlying felony, and the death was in furtherance of the crime. Neither of those apply here.
They committed burglary, not murder.
I think charging him as an accessory to attempted murder is fair. He joined in the commission of the crime and his friend shooting at the cops is attempted murder. He didn't shoot his friend. The cop killed his friend in self-defense. The death itself is not murder and the person responsible for the death isn't the one charged. If the kid shot at cops and his friend was killed in the return fire then I'm more malleable on a murder charge.
All that said, I don't trust Reason to accurately report these events and question whether the convict engaged in more egregious conduct to justify the conviction.
Play stupid games and win stupid prizes. Regardless, I don't want anybody excessively penalized or charged for a crime they didn't commit.
The initiation of violence is where I'm going to start in deciding who is responsible for a resulting death.
I remember first learning about how the Felony Murder Doctrine is used by DAs when back in the early 1970s in the city where I lived the news reported on a store robbery where no one was injured but someone present at the store during the robbery had a heart attack and died. The DA charged the robber with first-degree murder, and the local newspaper ran an article explaining how any death during a felony could result in a murder charge. A charge that can include capital punishment does seem a bit severe for this type of offense.
Here's a short post with more examples of felony murder charges.
https://www.crimlawpractitioner.org/post/2016/03/22/burglaries-heart-attacks-and-murder
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He committed a crime, and it wasn't some stupid victimless crime, it was a real crime. I think strict liability for that sort of thing is reasonable, and, as they say, if you don't like that, don't do the crime.
I wouldn't object to changing felony murder to a manslaughter charge, though.
That's fair to me. His actions led to the violent conflict resulting in death. Manslaughter feels right in this case if you need a culprit instead of just shrugging at his friend's suicide by cop
"Washington then exited the home and darted out from the backyard fence, with a gun, at which point a different officer—whose body camera footage can be seen here—shot and killed him."
So, cop shoots colored kid. Another kid is then framed for the murder while cop waltzes out under qualified immunity with kid thrown under an Alabama prison. This at the place the Lootvig von Mises Institute and AfD Nazi Billionaires chose as the HQ bridgehead for a National Socialist takeover of the LP. Enjoy!
Nobody was framed for a murder Hankie you stupid piece of shit. A cop justifiably shot and killed an armed robber who took a shot at his partner inside the house they were robbing, and 3 of the criminal pieces of shit who were caught during the same robbery got charged with felony murder. You see, libertarians believe in self defense and property rights, so when poor li'l dindus run around robbing people's homes with a gun in their hand to kill the victim of their robbery if they should happen to be caught, libertarians don't take the side of the poor li'l dindu, they take the side of the victim of the violent crime that was perpetrated. Get it now, Hankie, or does it need to be broken down into shorter words for you?
Also I know you're in your late 80s and deep in the throes of senile dementia but "colored" hasn't been the preferred nomenclature for about 50 years. If you want to flex your woke bona fides to all of the other civil war veterans in your group home, try reading an ActBlue talking points memo from the last decade or so.
Felony murder rule:
"The felony murder rule is a law in most states and under federal law that allows anyone who is accused of committing a violent felony to be charged with murder if the commission of that felony results in the death of someone. The people involved in the felony may be charged for murder under the rule even if they had no intention of killing someone."
This has been the law of the land forever. Not the murder of someone, not if shot by a cop to stop the felony, but only the “death” of someone, anyone, even your partner in crime. Don’t commit felonies, don’t get charged with murder. Pretty darn simple.
Sorry, I can't agree on this instance.
If you start a gunfight, then you are guilty of the deaths of everyone that dies in that fight. With few exceptions, everyone in a criminal group is guilty of all the crimes that the group commits.
If the cops had escalated the situation unwarranted, this would be different.
This is what happens when lawyers write the laws instead of the people who want equal protection under those laws (literally everyone else!) It's also what happens when lawyers interpret the laws and enforce them. What this criminal did was burglarize houses which is, and should be, a crime. What he should have been prosecuted and punished for is - you guessed it! - burglarizing houses. It is possible that if one of his co-burglars killed someone in the process, he should have been punished for the additional level of "accessory before the fact" if he knew that the another fellow perp was carrying a gun. And NOTHING ELSE!
arepas are good
There is literally nothing wrong here. Stop stealing from your betters. Don't carry a gun while stealing. Don't shoot at police. Don't associate with people who do the same.