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An Oxford High School shooting survivor reacts to ruling that the shooter is eligible to be sentenced to life without parole, then a Southeast Michigan eatery that focuses on Peruvian foods. And the strong connections between residents and the businesses in Southwest Detroit.
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Oxford School shooter could serve life without parole, the Moth story slam does porch pop-ups, a great Detroit Tiger player with a bad legacy, sheep helping solar fields and a conversation with a Southwest Detroit muralist.
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Life without the possibility of parole will be among the sentencing options for the teenager who killed four students at Oxford High School nearly two years ago, Oakland County Circuit Court Judge Kwamé Rowe said on Friday. Teenager Ethan Crumbley will be sentenced on December 8.
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The prosecutor's final remarks came at the close of a four-day hearing that will determine whether Ethan Crumbley gets a life sentence for the attack at Oxford High School or a shorter term that would some day make him eligible for parole.
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The family of Hana St. Juliana, one of the students killed in the Oxford High School shooting, recently broke ground on a memorial garden for the four young victims. They held an event on Sunday in honor of the groundbreaking and to raise funds for the construction and upkeep of the garden.
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The cherry industry is changing in northern Michigan. We'll hear how local growers who are trying to adapt in order to survive.
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Tomorrow, there will be a Miller hearing at the Oakland County Circuit Court to determine whether or not the Oxford school shooter will be sentenced to life without parole. Beenish Ahmed covered the factors that will be considered in the hearing.
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A breakdown of the legal standards of sentencing a juvenile to life without a chance of parole in the Oxford High School shooter's hearing, and a Detroit artist who reshaped hip hop.
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The United States Supreme Court has said life without parole should be reserved for “the rare juvenile offender whose crime reflects irreparable corruption" and set standards to determine when it's an appropriate sentence. A hearing this week will determine if Ethan Crumbley should be one of those rare cases.
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The judge will hold a hearing to decide if a no-parole sentence is OK for 17 year old Ethan Crumbley, charged with first-degree murder of 4 others in school shooting.