Ray Widstrand was left for dead on the streets of St. Paul two summers ago, unconscious and stripped to his underwear, with blood pooling under his nearly lifeless body as the mob of teenagers who attacked him fled into the August night.
Twenty-one months later, still scarred from the beating, Widstrand limped into a Ramsey County courtroom Friday without the aid of a cane or a brace to face Charles K. Redding, 17, who sparked the brutal attack by throwing the first punch.
"My life has changed dramatically," said Widstrand, 28, who suffers permanent physical and mental damage. "I've lost a great deal."
Minutes later, Judge Salvador Rosas sentenced Redding, who was 15 at the time of the assault but certified to stand trial as an adult, to a maximum of 8 ⅓ years in prison for the Aug. 4, 2013, attack on the East Side.
Redding's case was the last of five to be resolved. "It's a relief, obviously, that the trials are over," Widstrand said afterward.
The attack shocked the community for its senselessness, and when Redding was given an opportunity to speak Friday, he provided no further insight into why it happened.
He pleaded guilty in March to aiding and abetting first-degree assault, and he said at the time that he punched Widstrand for "no reason." Dismissed were two counts of crime committed for the benefit of a gang and one count of aiding and abetting first-degree aggravated robbery.
While Redding apologized Friday to the Widstrand family and to his own mother, Rosas wasn't convinced, saying, "I know you're nervous. I know you're young, but there's no feeling behind the words."