Eating an ice cream cone in the living room of the south Minneapolis apartment where he lives with his mom and little sister, Miguel Torres Jr. is a normal 12-year-old boy — save for the 20 stitches and 14 staples that crisscross his body.
Just days before, he awoke from a medically induced coma following a May 6 knife attack at the hands of his mother's ex-boyfriend. Miguel's wounds are a grim reminder of how children — frequently young boys — are caught up in the violence of domestic abuse. Despite the severity of his injuries, Miguel survived and is recovering. In recent cases of intimate partner violence, other boys his age were killed by their mother's partner or ex-partner.
Last week an Olivia, Minn., man was sentenced to nearly 17 years for the 2022 murder of 13-year-old Isaac Hoff. The boy's mom was being assaulted by her boyfriend Houston A. Morris when she grabbed a knife to protect herself. Morris took hold of it and stabbed the teenager.
In 2020, 15-year-old Julio Cesar Guadalupe Rodriguez was defending his mom and keeping his five siblings safe when he was fatally stabbed by his stepfather. Police called him a hero. Jaime A. Vaca pleaded guilty and was sentenced to 31 years.
"Abusers will use children as a means of power and control," said Joe Shannon with the statewide coalition Violence Free Minnesota. "That can be used as a way to get back at the partner in a way that can hurt them for longer."
Miguel said he thought of fleeing the apartment when an allegedly meth-fueled Craig Allen Stevens, 50, attacked him with a knife. But then he realized his 9-year-old sister, Julie, was still inside.
"I was just thinking of ways I could like run outside," Miguel said. "And [Stevens] said, 'Julie, get back in your room' ... then I knew she was here, so I was like, I can't leave."
Miguel's mom, Melissa Williams, who was locked outside of the apartment during the encounter and frantically called 911 before police arrived and disarmed Stevens, said what happened to Miguel was the culmination of an abusive cycle that was difficult to escape.