Video: 70 months for final defendant in Steve Bushaw murder

(WSB video of entire hearing, added 10:57 am)
ORIGINAL 8:49 AM REPORT: We are in the courtroom of King County Superior Court Judge Joan DuBuque, where Brandon Chaney has been brought in, in jailhouse orange-red, to be sentenced. He is the last of four defendants to be sentenced in the February 2009 murder of lifelong West Seattleite Steve Bushaw (right). Chaney was the getaway driver the night two men shot and killed Mr. Bushaw in The Junction on Super Bowl Sunday night in 2009, in retribution for another crime in which it was “mistakenly believed,” as prosecutors put it, “that (the victim) was involved.” As first reported here one week ago, Chaney, whose case ended in a mistrial last summer, pleaded guilty to manslaughter and “felony rendering of criminal assistance.” and We will publish updates as this unfolds.

8:50 AM UPDATE: Prosecutor Jeff Baird is recapping the longrunning case, briefly, noting that the other defendants were sent to prison for murder in this “senseless and tragic,” as he describes it, case. Members of Mr. Bushaw’s family are here, and his mother will address the court, Baird says. Prosecutors are recommending the high end of the ranges for the two charges – 34 months and 14 months, to be served concurrently, plus a 36-month penalty because a gun was involved, 70 months total. Chaney would get credit for time served; arrests were made in late 2009, 10 months after the murder.

8:55 AM UPDATE: “My son was just paving his way in the world – his whole life was ahead of him,” Meg Bushaw has begun her remarks to the court, saying her life “was forever changed by this tragedy,” as has been that of her family. “Let justice be served… Only Brandon really knows how involved he was with this, and I hope he lives with this the rest of their life. I hope he knows who did the home invasion, because everyone in this courtroom knows it wasn’t our son. May he know the depth of our sorrow for the rest of his life. I hope he learns what is right and wrong … Finally today my family and I will have closure to this nightmare.”

8:57 AM UPDATE: The lead detective in the case, James Cooper, is now speaking. “We know what led to the death of Steve Bushaw,” he said, going on to say that Chaney was solely responsible for choices he made in this case, and saying that he wants him to at least get the high end. “I speak for the ones who can’t… I speak today for Steve Bushaw.” Cooper thinks Chaney should be sentenced to 120 months – 10 years – far beyond the high end of the “range.” He was followed by Chaney’s current lawyer, not the same one who represented him during the trial last year. He said neither Chaney nor any of the other three “had ‘killer’ stamped all over them,” and that in everything he read of the case’s background, it simply made no sense that this happened. Chaney spoke briefly, after his lawyer read an excerpt from a letter of apology that he wrote.

9:01 AM UPDATE: Judge DuBuque is speaking now, about the “lives shattered … a tragedy of unmeasurable proportions, the effect that this has had on the community.” She is sentencing him to the 34 months recommended for manslaughter, the 14 months recommended for criminal assistance, and the 36-month firearm enhancement, so with the first two served concurrently, that is the 70-month sentence requested by prosecutors, followed by 18 months of community custody (probation).

9:05 AM UPDATE: And after just a bit more than 15 minutes, the hearing is over, and deputies have put Chaney back in handcuffs and led him out of the courtroom. He had family members here, the judge was told, but none spoke. The other three defendants were all sentenced last year – Bryce Huber, who planned the shooting, was tried with Chaney, and found guilty of first-degree murder, sentenced to 32 years; triggermen John Sylve and Danny O’Neal, who both pleaded guilty to second-degree murder without going to trial, were sentenced to 20 and 15 years respectively. We recorded today’s hearing on video and will add it to this story after uploading it back at headquarters.

15 Replies to "Video: 70 months for final defendant in Steve Bushaw murder"

  • george May 10, 2012 (9:24 am)

    No winners in any of this. Was the home invasion ever solved?

  • chris May 10, 2012 (9:29 am)

    Months? At first I thought it said years then read it again. Total B.S.

  • JF May 10, 2012 (9:52 am)

    My heart breaks still every time I see Meg and imagine what the pain of losing a child in this senseless way feels like. I’m not sure if this sentence was adequate but I hope it brings the Bushaw family some peace.
    Your Schmitz Park family loves you. Mrs B

  • WSratsinacage May 10, 2012 (10:53 am)

    ditto jf

  • evergreen May 10, 2012 (11:13 am)

    As a mom to boys, I look at that boy’s picture and think, “this could have been my child”. My heart breaks in agony for the parents. So sorry for your loss.

  • someone who cares May 10, 2012 (12:25 pm)

    Love you Brandon !!!!!!

  • wsmom May 10, 2012 (12:33 pm)

    As a mom I can’t imagine what Meg is and has gone through over the past 3 years. I hope that this can bring some closure for her and her family.

    Well said JF… Mrs B WE ALL LOVE YOU. I think of you often, and I talk about this with my children often. You are so strong and an inspiration to us all.

    Love, A Schmitz Park Parent

  • FSPD May 10, 2012 (2:15 pm)

    good to see they got everyone now i hope they get the people who killed Jeremy peck

  • Cheryl May 10, 2012 (2:28 pm)

    70 months is nowhere near enough time IMO. But I agree w/ @JF, I really hope there is some measure of peace for the Bushaw family. They are in my thoughts and prayers.

  • Dee May 10, 2012 (3:46 pm)

    The guy got off way too easy. He was instrumental in the whole idea of retribution, knew why they were meeting Huber at 7-11, and was aware of the gun play that was about to go down. Dumb gangsta mentality. His hair business probably a front for drug dealing and it’s money laundering.

  • (required) May 10, 2012 (4:26 pm)

    I just wanted to add that I agree with other comment makers that 70 months is a fraction of justice. One human’s life was ended by murder; the survivor gets free medical care, meals, and housing. Yes, it’s jail, but for less than six years — and even then, that figure will be reduced by a sizable chunk for “good behavior.” Sick, is how I describe this sentenmce. Way way WAY too lenient for killing somebody. Shame.

  • TMG May 10, 2012 (5:38 pm)

    Glad that justice is served. Still doesn’t bring Stevie back. RIP Stevie I know you are an angel now. Watching over

  • Jami Hanning Vaux May 10, 2012 (9:18 pm)

    Meg My thoughts are with you. Hugs, Jami

  • WTF May 10, 2012 (10:34 pm)

    Yay & good riddance. Next…

  • WSB May 21, 2012 (9:55 am)

    To the person whose profane and insulting comment will not be approved for publication: We recorded and published the video because people have the right to know how the court system works. And no, this is not “a blog.” Just honored by the Society of Professional Journalists last Saturday night for distinguished service to journalism, for what we do, day in and day out, night in and night out, on this story and hundreds of others, in a 30-year journalism career.
    .
    http://www.spjwash.org/2012/05/join-us-in-honoring-june-a-almquist-award-winner-tracy-record/
    .
    That is mentioned not as self-puffery – I haven’t even written about it on this site, we are not self-promoters and there’s too much actual news to deal with – but since you don’t seem to know that this is a journalist-run site, there you go.
    .
    Meantime, not sure what “papers” you claim named a couple of other people in this case who were never charged – if you mean court documents, yes, there are MANY names in court documents that we’ll never publish, including witnesses, even though they are technically public record, and if you download court docs, you can read them for yourself. Otherwise, if you mean “news”papers, we were the ONLY news organization to cover the entire trial last summer and most of the case along the way – a couple of others parachuted in briefly to cover a hearing here, a hearing there, which is no substitute for complete, thorough coverage, which we have been and will continue to be committed to. And if their ethics code allows them to publish the names of people who haven’t been arrested or charged, I consider that unfortunate, and no newsroom in I ever worked would have allowed it, but I can’t control what somebody else decides to do. If prosecutors have the evidence to charge anyone else in the case, I hope they will, and if they do, we will cover that too. Thanks for your interest. – Tracy

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