
A Chicago man was sentenced to life in prison Tuesday, three months after a Hennepin County jury convicted him of first- and second-degree murder for the fatal road rage shooting of a local youth baseball coach last summer.
Amalie Boughton was 13 when her dad, Jay Boughton, was killed July 6, 2021, and up until then she had "never lost anyone in my life or been to a funeral before," she said inside the packed courtroom. She sat beside her grieving mother, Kristin, and older brother Harrison, who was in the passenger seat the night their father was shot on Hwy. 169 in Plymouth by Jamal Lindsey Smith while driving home from Harrison's baseball game.
"They just wanted to get home that night for a hot shower and bed," said Boughton's 81-year-old mother, Nova Boughton, in her victim impact statement, in which she decried escalating gun violence and Smith's senseless actions 455 days ago.
"Nearly every day and night since then, I've been trying to understand why it even happened. … I don't hate Mr. Smith. But with all my being I do hate guns and especially what he did with his gun."
Smith, 34, of Chicago, appeared virtually from jail for his sentencing. When District Judge Nicole Engisch gave him the opportunity to speak after hearing four victim impact statements from Boughton's mother, wife and children, Smith went on a nearly 12-minute diatribe lacking any remorse and maintaining his innocence.
"I am being held accountable for actions that I did not do," he said. "I have had no respect in the courtroom. … I promised my mother I would fight. I'm going to fight."
His attorney, Emmett Donnelly, said to Engisch that "this is an Innocence Project case waiting to happen," referring to the nonprofit that helps exonerate people from wrongful convictions.
Plymouth Police Chief Erik Fadden said he stands by his team's investigation.