Sherrice Barnett listened in disbelief as Hennepin County Attorney Mary Moriarty explained that a teenager charged in her son's murder would be spared prison.
"I couldn't breathe," Barnett recalled. "I said, 'I just got to get up out of here.' I never would have imagined in a million years that it would have went that way."
She assumed the only reasonable outcome for the killing of her son Derrell Freeman, 27, was significant time behind bars — as suggested by state guidelines.
Barnett echoes a group of crime victims' families who say they feel retraumatized by what appears to be a pattern with Moriarty's administration. The families are told that instead of seeking prison, prosecutors want probation. Notice of the abrupt change is urgent. It comes days before a scheduled plea hearing, during which families say it sounds like the prosecutor advocates more for the defendant than them or the victim.
"It's a trend definitely because of Mary Moriarty. She's still playing public defender — the only thing is, that's not her role anymore," said Catherine Markey, a veteran attorney whose son was also gunned down and killed by teens.
Moriarty has 30 years of experience working on the other side of the courtroom defending the accused. She served as chief public defender for the county before winning election and transitioning this year to top prosecutor in Minnesota's largest public law office.
In an interview Friday, Moriarty said her new role "is completely different and that's clear to me." She campaigned as a reformer focused on equity and rehabilitation, not punishment, especially for youth.
"I think it takes a lot of courage actually to act upon what you say you're going to do," she said. "I knew we would get a lot of pushback.