WBURGadson Sentencing A Symbol Of Multi-Generational Crime

BOSTON — On a June night in 2007, 8-year-old Liquarry Jefferson and his younger cousin were watching television at his Roxbury home. Liquarry brought out a handgun. It was unregistered. And unsecured.

It belonged to Liquarry’s stepbrother, a 15-year-old member of a local gang, who kept the gun in his unlocked bedroom dresser.

It was a 9mm semi-automatic.

“I asked (Liquarry) if there were bullets in the gun. He said no,” the 7-year-old cousin would testify.

When the cousin pulled the trigger, he fired a single bullet into Liquarry’s stomach. The cousin ran out screaming.

“I did it by accident,” he testified. Liquarry Jefferson died on the operating table at Boston Medical Center.

The Cover-Up

Three years and a couple months after his death, Liquarry’s mother, Lakeisha Gadson, entered a Suffolk County Superior Court room Thursday for sentencing. A jury had convicted her last month of lying to police about the circumstances of Liquarry’s death.

“By giving false descriptions of intruders who never came into her apartment and by counseling her children to do the same thing, the defendant put the cover-up of this crime ahead of a search for the truth,” Assistant District Attorney David Deakin said during Thursday’s court proceedings.

Deakin told the judge that Gadson didn’t call 911 until after she’d made sure her teenage son disposed of the gun and after they had made up a story of three men breaking in and shooting.

Gadson’s defense attorney, Peter Krupp, attributed her actions to grief and shock and downplayed the efforts at deception.

“None of the police officers who heard this statement — that three people ran in the house — believed it,” Krupp said Thursday.

The story Gadson told police and the story told by her teenage son, Jayquan McConnico, fell apart quickly. Within a day, Gadson publicly apologized for lying to police. And McConnico, who’d been keeping the gun in his bedroom drawer, would later plead guilty to manslaughter in his stepbrother’s death.

Gadson’s Sentencing

When Gadson, now the mother of four children, went to trial at the beginning of August, the prosecution argued that by allowing her teenage son to keep a loaded handgun in her house, or by keeping it there herself, Gadson was responsible for Liquarry’s death.

But the jurors acquitted Gadson of involuntary manslaughter and all but one charge.

“Lakeisha Gadson’s conduct was reprehensible on many levels. The jury has spoken and we’re left with this one charge of misleading the police,” said Suffolk District Attorney Dan Conley.

And on that conviction, the district attorney sought a sentence of two-and-a-half years in jail, with one year to be served.

“We need to send a very strong message to the public,” Conley said, “this kind of conduct can not be tolerated.”

A History Of Crime

Gadson, 34, sat somberly, her eyes darting. Since the death of her 8-year-old, her’s has become the family that symbolizes multi-generational crime. She had five children with three different fathers, all gang members with extensive records of violent crime and jail time. And police believe the father of her youngest child brought her oldest one, Jayquan, into the same gang.

Gadson herself has a long record of larcenies and assault and battery.

“The court cannot overlook the fact that the defendant has 19 prior convictions, 11 previous incidents, and the court takes as great significance two convictions for assault and battery on a police officer,” said Suffolk Superior Court Judge Thomas Connors.

Gadson’s defense attorney, Krupp, successfully argued at the trial that there was no evidence that she knew or approved of her teenage son having a gun in her house. He asked the jurors not to compound the tragedy of Liquarry’s death by convicting her. Thursday, he asked the judge not to send her to jail.

“Ms. Gadson has already lost her son; it’s a punishment that is greater than any punishment the court can impose, obviously” Krupp said.

In the end, Judge Connors said that the true victim was the child, Liquarry Jefferson.

The court is imposing a sentence of two and a half years to the House of Corrections,” Connors said. But he suspended all but six months that she will actually serve.

As Gadson’s mother, who’s now the legal guardian of Gadson’s surviving children, looked on, the handcuffs snapped shut. And the rest of the sentence was read: ordering four years probation and a course on parenting.

WBUR Topics · Boston · Crime & Justice
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  • Ayanna McKinnon

    “…a course on parenting.” I think this is a little too late. This woman should lose her children and the right to bear more children. Either she is criminally foolish or criminally irresponsible- neither of which makes her fit to be a mother.

  • Gary Hills

    I don’t know what your viewpoints are or if you have some agenda that comes through in your story, but you state, “It was unregistered.” Of course it was! There is no gun registration in Massachusetts. Are you implying that there should be? As a responsible gun owner myself (for about 40 years) I strongly object to your statement. And I strongly object to gun registration. If the other statements in your article are true, I doubt that the owner of that firearm would have purchased or registered the gun no matter the laws anyway.

    There is a legal requirement to control a firearm, which means it is under your direct supervision or is secured (locked up). And the owner of that firearm failed to do that. That is the root cause of the tragedy.

  • david boeri

    David Boeri here regarding Gary Hills’ comment.

    I wrote of the gun in question “It was unregistered.” You wrote back “Of course it was!” Then you later write “I strongly object to your statement.” Apparently you don’t. But you do object to the idea you have arrived at that I approve of gun registration, which you clearly don’t. You’re a little too quick to pull the trigger there, but you were right to take aim at the statement.

    Neither the fifteen year old brother nor the mother had a license to possess,purchase or carry that gun. I wrote the gun was unregistered which, while true, didn’t get to the point they had the gun illegally. And the law, as you point out, didn’t alter their behavior until after the eight year old was shot and they knew the police would be coming.

  • http://n/a flora haas

    This exposes the futility of many jail sentences; if there’s any hope for this woman and her surviving children, this family needs a full program of help; incarceration will only WORSEN everything! Perhaps because I, myself, recently suddenly lost a (grown) son (from sudden heart-stoppage) I agree w/her attorney — this mother has already had the worst punishment.

    This woman’s previous children were not born in a hayfield; some hospital,ER department,social agency could have humanely intervened w/birth control help. The comment on Sept. 4, by A.M. is so full of blame — SHE should seek forgiveness for such righteousness!

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