A Minneapolis teenager received a prison term of more than 12 years for pulling off three armed carjackings in the Twin Cities last spring, including one in which he pulled the trigger on a loaded gun aimed at a man who tried to thwart one of the ambushes, but the weapon malfunctioned.
Shamir N. Black, 19, was sentenced in U.S. District Court in St. Paul after pleading guilty to one count of carjacking in connection with the violent auto theft in early June outside the Tony Jaros bar in northeast Minneapolis. His sentence includes three years of court supervision after his 12½-year prison term.
As part of the plea agreement, Black also admitted to involvement in two other armed carjackings in Golden Valley in May 2022.
In a court filing ahead of sentencing, defense attorney Ian Birrell wrote that even though his client was at risk of many years in prison, his arrest "was the best thing that could have happened to him because he needed to change — and it appears he has decided to change. … He is not a hardened criminal but instead a young man with the tools, motivation and support to live a good life in the future."
Birrell also highlighted Black's immediate contrition upon his arrest, his willingness to waive his right to an attorney and answer investigators' questions "quietly and respectfully. He quickly admitted he had done the acts they suspected him of doing," and revealed that he snorted an addictive prescription painkiller shortly before two of the carjackings.
Prosecutors countered in their presentence filing that Black deserved the maximum term that federal guidelines recommended because he committed "the type of arbitrary crime that leaves people reeling with trauma for years. ... [Black] has demonstrated a pattern of lawlessness over the past several years, and a significant sentence will protect the public while he corrects his course."
The prosecution also pointed out that Black's criminal history as a juvenile includes three convictions for auto theft but at the same time nodded to his addiction to opiates and continuing "struggle with unresolved mental health issues stemming from loss and grief."
According to court documents: