Moments before a prolific Twin Cities heroin dealer was sentenced to more than 14 years in prison for the overdose deaths of two men, the father and brother of one victim made a plea for leniency, stunning some of those in the Hennepin County courtroom.
The revelation came Thursday at the first sentencing for Beverly Burrell, who was tried and convicted of third-degree murder in the deaths of Max Tillitt and Luke Ronnei in a statewide push to get heroin off the streets by going after distributors.
Burrell, 31, of Maplewood, known on the streets as "Ice," also faces third-degree murder charges for selling heroin that killed three other men.
Broken with grief, family members of Tillitt and Ronnei stood before Hennepin County District Judge Paul Scoggin to talk about the never-ending pain of losing a loved one to an insidious addiction that they wrestled to overcome.
For some, like Colleen Ronnei and her family, the "longest possible" prison sentence for drug dealers would help serve justice and begin to stem the heroin epidemic.
But to Stephen Tillitt, Max's father, a long prison sentence would serve little purpose.
Stephen Tillitt, his voice cracking at times, talked about a son who began using drugs after suffering a concussion during high school football practice and falling into depression. Max Tillitt, 21, of Eden Prairie, had told his family that he regretted using drugs but that the addiction was overpowering.
"Max knew the dangers of heroin use," his father said. Although the disease crippled his willpower, Max bought the drug from Burrell and he put it in his body, Stephen Tillitt said.