Today,
the tragic case of what the mainstream media dubbed the "Halo Killer"
came to a resolution of sorts. According to a report from local Fox TV
affiliate WJW-TV,
an Ohio judge sentenced 17-year-old Daniel Petric to 23 years to life
for fatally shooting his 43-year-old mother in October 2007. Petric was
convicted of the crime back in January, but was spared the death
penalty because of his age.
![](http://image.com.com/gamespot/images/2009/166/halo3killer573_screen307_178thumb.jpg)
Both
Petric's defense attorneys and prosecutors blamed the crime on the
teen's "addiction" to the game Halo 3. His lawyers claimed that the
teen had become obsessed with the game after playing it constantly
while incapacitated for months following an injury. Pleading an
insanity defense, they argued he would forgo food and sleep to play the
game for up to 18 hours a day, creating a mental state where he didn't
think death was permanent.
"The playing of the video games and
the reality of shooting somebody in his case was blinded; it was
merged," defense attorney James Kersey reportedly argued. "He had no
thoughts during this process. During this time, he was blinded that his
parents might be dead; that they might never come back."
When Petric's parents began to limit his time playing the game, he became distraught. According to a January Associated Press report,
the teen planned the murder for weeks before entering his parents'
bedroom and shooting them both in the head. Petric reportedly said
"Close your eyes, I've got a surprise for you," before pulling the
trigger and then altering the crime scene to make it look like a
murder-suicide. He then fled with the game.
"His addiction was so
strong, was running rampant in a tired, exhausted young man, that
anybody or anything that stood between him playing the video game and
not having his way was in peril," Kersey said of Petric's state of mind
during the killings.
Petric's 45-year-old father, a local
minister, survived his wounds and was in court supporting his son
throughout the trial. Judge James Burge took the father's pleas for
leniency into account in passing the sentence, which will make the
younger Petric eligible for parole in the year 2032. Burge also pinned
much of the blame on games themselves, voicing his wishes that game addiction be studied further.
"I feel confident that if there were no such thing as violent video games, I wouldn't know Daniel Petric," said the judge.