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Gang Member Gets Stiff Sentence for Murder

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Times Staff Writer

To the satisfaction of tearful members of his victim’s family, teen-age gang member Shawn Christopher Boykin was sentenced Friday to the maximum 16 years to life in prison for murdering another youth at Fairfax High School.

“May God have mercy on them. . . , “ the slain youth’s grandmother, Albirtha Anderson, said of Boykin, 19, and his co-defendant, Andre West, 18. West is scheduled for sentencing March 9.

With tears brimming in her eyes, Anderson told reporters that Boykin and West had “sentenced themselves (to) live for the rest of their lives” with the knowledge that they had killed her grandson, 18-year-old Antoine (Tony) Thompson.

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Thompson, not a gang member, had overcome dyslexia, a reading handicap, with the help of Fairfax High School teacher Linda Brooks and was college-bound when he was killed Sept. 12, 1986. He had stopped at Fairfax to get Brooks’ advice on courses at West Los Angeles College, and was killed in a quarrel over use of a pay telephone.

‘More Than Pleased’

“I’m more than pleased with the sentencing of this young man (Boykin),” said Anderson, who had urged Superior Court Judge David Horowitz to impose the maximum penalty. The sentence shows that “when you break the law, there’s a penalty.”

Boykin and West pleaded guilty Oct. 7, 1987, to second-degree murder. In addition to the prison term, Horowitz ordered Boykin to pay $10,000 in restitution to the victim’s family. Until he is 25 years old, Boykin will serve his sentence at a California Youth Authority facility. After that, he will be transferred to a state prison.

But Horowitz told Boykin “a young man, otherwise minding his own business and with a future, is dead for no reason that I can think of. . . . There is absolutely no excuse for what you did.”

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