A jury found Cindarion D. Butler guilty Tuesday night of aiding and abetting first-degree assault and first-degree robbery in last year's near-fatal attack on Ray Widstrand on St. Paul's East Side.
The jury of five women and seven men acquitted Butler of two counts of crime committed for the benefit of a gang but also found that there were aggravating factors — that Widstrand was particularly vulnerable and that Butler acted in concert with three or more assailants. Butler could face about seven to 10 years in prison, but the aggravating factors allow prosecutors to seek twice that amount when he is sentenced on March 25.
For the Widstrands, who found their son at the center of one of the most savage and high-profile crimes recently in the Twin Cities, the conviction brought relief after months of worry and disappointment when another suspect was tried and acquitted last year.
"It just picks up our spirits, and we keep fighting," his mother, Linda Widstrand. said Tuesday night after the verdict. "It really does wonders."
Jurors began deliberating at 4 p.m. and reached their verdicts just before 8:30 p.m. Linda Widstrand said her son was in bed when they received the news.
"I told him, and he was really, really happy," she said. "I'm just glad justice was done for Ray."
Issac O. Maiden, 19, was tried in November in the attack and was acquitted on all counts, partly due to the confusing and contradicting testimony of several teenage witnesses. That dealt a blow to the Widstrands, who were — and are still — dealing with major hurdles in Widstrand's recovery.
Widstrand, 27, was jumped on, kicked and punched on St. Paul's East Side on Aug. 4. He suffered a traumatic brain injury that left him with physical and mental disabilities.