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A case management conference has been set for Aug. 26 with a pre-trial conference to follow on Sept. 5, 2025. Mays’ jury trial has been set to begin at 9 a.m. on Sept. 29, 2025.
Miller was indicted on May 6, after nearly 3 months in the hospital, on the same charges. Terry Young, the third alleged shooter, also faces the same charges and is set to stand before a jury at 9 a.m. on March 10, 2025, for his crimes.


A 16-year-old Kansas City boy [known as AM] charged in the Super Bowl parade shooting was released to home detention by a Jackson County judge on Thursday.

On Wednesday, Phillips ruled in a sealed motion that A.M. would not be tried as an adult.
 
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  • #265

The medical costs incurred by the survivors of the shooting are hitting hard, and they won't end soon. The average medical spending for someone who is shot increases by nearly $30,000 in the first year, according to a Harvard Medical School study. Another study found that number goes up to $35,000 for children. Ten kids were shot at the parade.

Then there are life's ordinary bills -- rent, utilities, car repairs -- that don't stop just because someone survived a mass shooting, even if their injuries prevent them from working or sending kids to school.

The financial burden that comes with surviving is so common it has a name, according to Aswad Thomas of the nonprofit Alliance for Safety and Justice: victimization debt. Some pay it out-of-pocket. Some open a new credit card. Some find help from generous strangers. Others can't make ends meet.
 
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  • #267

Lyndell Mays was already charged with second-degree murder, two counts of armed criminal action and unlawful use of a weapon. A Jackson County grand jury charged him with causing catastrophe. According to the Jackson County Prosecutor’s Office, Mays was the first person to pull a firearm at the Feb. 14 rally before Dominic Miller, 18, fired the shot that killed Lisa Lopez-Galvan.


After short recess for deliberation, a judge sentenced the [15-year-old] boy to 9-12 months in state youth detention center.


The man accused of firing the shot that killed local DJ Lisa Lopez-Galvan at the Chiefs Super Bowl parade shooting [Dominic Miller] will stand trial in January 2026, a judge ruled Monday. […] The trial is scheduled to begin Jan. 12 and last two weeks. […] Young and Mays are scheduled for trial in 2025 — beginning March 10 for Young, September 29 for Mays.
 
  • #268
In December of 2024, 22-year-old Ronnel Dewayne Williams Jr. was sentenced in U.S. District Court to five years of probation in connection to the shooting.


Mays' jury trial is scheduled to start on Sept. 25, 2025; Miller's begins Jan. 12, 2026; and Young's is set to begin on March 10.

Two juveniles were also charged in connection to the incident.

A spokesperson for the Jackson County Family Court said their cases "were adjudicated and disposed of in the Family Court system."

 
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Prosecutors have dropped a second-degree murder charge against Terry Young, a man accused of firing a gun during a shootout at the 2024 Kansas City Chiefs Super Bowl parade and rally that left one woman dead and more than 20 injured.

Young appeared in Jackson County Circuit Court at 2 p.m. Friday for a case management conference.

Walking into that hearing, he faced one count of second-degree murder, one count of unlawful use of a weapon and two counts of armed criminal action.

He will now serve two years in the Missouri Department of Corrections after pleading guilty to a weapons offense.
 
  • #272
Prosecutors have dropped a second-degree murder charge against Terry Young, a man accused of firing a gun during a shootout at the 2024 Kansas City Chiefs Super Bowl parade and rally that left one woman dead and more than 20 injured.

Young appeared in Jackson County Circuit Court at 2 p.m. Friday for a case management conference.

Walking into that hearing, he faced one count of second-degree murder, one count of unlawful use of a weapon and two counts of armed criminal action.

He will now serve two years in the Missouri Department of Corrections after pleading guilty to a weapons offense.
I hope the prosecutors will be ok with themselves when this man is again charged in a violent crime in a few years.
 

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