LITTLE FALLS, MINN. – A Little Falls man accused of shooting two teenage intruders at his home on Thanksgiving Day has been indicted on first-degree, premeditated murder charges in connection with the killings.
The charges, spelled out Thursday during a 15-minute hearing at the Morrison County Courthouse, came after a grand jury spent two days this week reviewing evidence and listening to testimony in the state's case against Byron David Smith, 64.
Smith, a retired U.S. State Department employee who set up security systems for embassies, was initially charged in November with second-degree murder in the deaths of Haile Kifer, 18, and her cousin, Nick Brady, 17, as they broke into his home along the backwaters of the Mississippi River.
Prosecutors have said that Smith shot the teens, who were unarmed, multiple times as they walked down the stairs to his basement about 10 minutes apart.
In Minnesota, a premeditated murder case cannot be prosecuted unless a grand jury has convened and issued a first-degree murder indictment. A conviction on the charge would mean life in prison without the possibility of parole.
Self-defense or too far?
The gruesome nature of the killings of Kifer and Brady has drawn widespread attention to Little Falls and divided many in this Mississippi River town 100 miles north of the Twin Cities over the issue of how far a homeowner can go to defend himself and protect his property.
Some of Smith's neighbors and relatives have said that he was acting in self-defense after a series of burglaries at his home in the weeks and months preceding the shootings. Court records in a related case against one of Brady's friends allege that Brady took part in at least two burglaries of Smith's property last summer and fall.
"He was scared," his attorney, Steve Meshbesher, has said of Smith.