Nathaniel Abraham The 11 Yr Old Killer

Nathaniel Abraham

Nathaniel Abraham was just eleven years old when he would shoot and kill a stranger in Michigan

According to court documents Nathaniel Abraham was playing with a rifle when he took aim at a stranger across the street. Nathaniel would pull the trigger striking and killing Ronnie Green

Nathaniel Abraham would be arrested soon after

It was revealed at trial that Nathaniel Abraham had stolen the gun a few days before, had taken target practice shooting at balloons and told friends that he was going to shoot someone

Nathaniel Abraham would be convicted and sentenced to spend the next eight years in youth detention

Nathaniel Abraham would be released before his twenty first birthday however he has been in and out of prison since then. Currently he is incarcerated in the Michigan Department of Corrections for dealing drugs.

Nathaniel Abraham Current Information

Nathaniel Abraham today

MDOC Number:

711418

SID Number:

1935060M

Name:

NATHANIEL JAMAR ABRAHAM

Racial Identification:

Black

Gender:

Male

Hair:

Black

Eyes:

Brown

Height:

5′ 8″

Weight:

172 lbs.

Date of Birth:

01/19/1986  (39)

Current Status:

Prisoner

Earliest Release Date:

02/28/2025

Assigned Location:

Earnest C. Brooks Correctional Facility

Maximum Discharge Date:

02/28/2059

Security Level:

II

Nathaniel Abraham Case

Nathaniel Abraham hardly presented the image of a deadly killer. Wearing oversized prison garb, the 65-pound boy appeared tearful and bewildered at pre-trial hearings. But prosecutors argued that Nathaniel was exactly the type of juvenile offender the 1996 law had meant to target. Police had previously suspected him in almost two dozen crimes, including burglary and assault. For a variety of reasons, however, the boy had never been formally charged.

Nathaniel Abraham’s case drew the attention of attorney Geoffrey Fieger, who had previously defended “Dr. Death,” Jack Kervorkian. Fieger took on the job pro bono and began a series of motions and appeals that delayed the trial until October 1999.

When the trial finally opened on October 29, prosecutor Lisa Halushka wrote down these words for the jury to read: “I’m gonna shoot somebody.” This, she claimed, was what Nathaniel Abraham had said to his girlfriend days before the killing. As the trial progressed, Halushka called witnesses who supported the idea that Nathaniel’s act had been a premeditated murder. He had stolen the rifle, then practiced target shooting at balloons. He had also fired the gun at a neighbor’s house, barely missing the occupant, just before the fatal shooting. Later, Halushka noted that Nathaniel had told police conflicting stories about the shootings—proof that he knew what he had done, and that it was wrong.

Defense attorney Fieger argued that the shooting was an unfortunate accident. Nathaniel Abraham did fire the gun, yes, but was not trying to hit anyone. Fieger also introduced testimony from an expert marksman. The witness said that it would be almost impossible to deliberately hit a small target from more than 200 feet—the distance Nathaniel was from the victim—using the old, battered rifle the boy had fired.

Fieger also called on child psychologists to describe Nathaniel Abraham’s mental state. The boy, these experts testified, had an IQ of 70, and at the time of the murder, his thought processes were like those of a seven-year-old. Fieger tried to prove that Nathaniel lacked the mental capacity to form the intent to kill. A prosecution psychologist witness, however, testified to rebut this claim.

Outside the courtroom, the trial provoked massive public interest. The CBS television magazine 60 Minutes profiled the case, and Oakland County Prosecutor David Gorcyca admitted the Michigan social system had failed to help Nathaniel in the past, despite his impaired intelligence and previous brushes with the law. Gorcyca said he owed the boy’s mother, Gloria, an apology. An upset Mrs. Abraham replied, “Owe me an apology! To say the system failed but they still want to try my child as an adult? This is ridiculous.”

Nathaniel Abraham Trial: 1999 | Encyclopedia.com

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