Daniel Petric

Daniel Petric
Born (1991-08-24) August 24, 1991
Nationality America
Occupation Student,
Criminal charge Murder
Criminal penalty Life sentence with parole available after 23 years
Criminal status Incarcerated
Parent(s) Mark and Susan Petric
Conviction(s) January 12, 2009
Details
Victims Susan Petric (killed),
Mark Petric (injured)
Date October 20, 2007
Country United States
State(s) Ohio
Location(s) Wellington
Killed Susan Petric
Injured Mark Petric
Weapons 9mm Taurus PT92
Date apprehended
October 20, 2007

Daniel Petric (born August 24, 1991) is a convicted murderer from Wellington, Ohio. At the age of 16, Petric shot both of his parents over a disagreement about video games. His mother was killed and his father was badly injured, but recovered.[1]

Background

The controversy between Daniel and his parents began when they forbade Daniel from buying and playing the Xbox 360 game Halo 3. Petric’s sister, Heidi Petric, testified in court that Daniel never played the game until he contracted a staphylococcus infection from a snow skiing injury and was housebound.[2] Petric was introduced to the Halo franchise while at the house of his friends, leading him to wanting a copy himself.[3] His father, Mark Petric, was a minister at the New Life Assembly of God in Wellington.[2] Both parents objected to the idea of their son playing a violent game with adult ratings and did not find it suitable for him. In Too Young To Kill, Mark claims that he told Daniel if he were to buy any violent video games whatsoever then he would destroy them, which did not sit well with Daniel. Mark testified that Daniel would regularly sneak out of the house at night without either parent’s knowledge and purchase the violent video games that his parents didn't approve of, where he also did this method with purchasing Halo 3 not long after it released.[2] While housebound, Daniel would sometimes play the game for up to 18 hours at a time without taking a break.[3] Susan eventually caught him playing the game and informed Mark, which led him to confiscate the game from Daniel for going against his parents' wishes. Mark locked the game in a safe cabinet that also concealed his 9mm Taurus PT-92 handgun. Daniel believed his father would play the game by himself.[2]

Shooting

A Taurus PT92, similar to the one used by Daniel Petric

About one week after the game was taken away from Daniel, on October 20, 2007, he used his father’s key to unlock the safe and take it back, also taking his father’s handgun. Court reports stated that Daniel came up behind his parents as they were relaxing on their couch in the living room and said “Would you close your eyes, I have a surprise for you.” Daniel then proceeded to shoot both of his parents.[3] His father said that “his head went numb and he saw blood pouring down from his skull.” [2] Daniel shot his mother in the head, arms, and chest, killing her. In court his father testified that after Daniel shot both of his parents, he tried to make the event look like a murder-suicide by placing the gun in his father's hand whilst saying to him “Hey dad, here’s your gun. Take it,”.[2] A few minutes later, his sister and her husband, Heidi and Andrew Archer, came over for their prior plans of watching a baseball game together. Daniel lied to them that they should not come in because their parents had been fighting. Then, they heard groaning and pushed their way through to find the aftermath of the shooting. Heidi called the police, and before they got there Daniel made an escape attempt by driving off in the family’s van with the Halo 3 game in the passenger seat. The police caught up with him and forced him out of the van via road block. While police were handcuffing him, he yelled "My Dad shot my Mom!"[2]

Trial

Daniel’s trial was held on December 15, 2008 at Lorain County Common Pleas in front of Judge James Burge.[3] No jury was present at the trial. His defense attorney, James Kersey, claimed that because of the enormous amount of stress put on him due to his severe infection, Daniel was much more susceptible to being influenced by the game.[3] He argued that Daniel was not in the right state of mind to understand the finality of shooting his parents. He had been playing the game so long that he did not comprehend the fact that death was real and permanent. The prosecuting attorney disagreed, and said that Daniel showed no remorse for his actions and that he had tried to set up the shootings as suicide by placing the gun in his father’s hand.[3] Daniel was tried for murder.

Due to his age, Daniel could not have been sentenced to death. The judge sentenced him to life in prison with the possibility of parole after 23 years, which was the minimum sentence. The maximum sentence Daniel faced was life in prison without parole, which was what the prosecuting attorney recommended for him.[2]

The case has been highlighted in papers and articles regarding video game addiction and video game violence.[4] Halo 3 publishers Microsoft refused to comment on the case past a statement of "We are aware of the situation and it is a tragic case."[5]

References

  1. Peckham, Matt (March 2009). "Games No Murder Defense". PC World. 27 (3): 16. Retrieved 2010-03-23.
  2. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 Caniglia, John (2009-06-17). "Wellington teen Daniel Petric gets 23 years for killing mom, shooting dad". Plain Dealer Reporter. Retrieved 2010-03-23.
  3. 1 2 3 4 5 6 Turner, Karl (2008-12-16). "17-year-old accused of killing mother over Halo 3 video game may get verdict soon". The Plain Dealer. Retrieved 2010-03-23.
  4. Newel, David, "The Negatives of Video Games on Society" (PDF), in Clemens, Tyler, Ethics Project, Rogaway, retrieved 2010-03-31
  5. "Teen killed mother in Halo 3 row". BBC News. 2009-01-13. Retrieved November 9, 2014.
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