Austin Thompson’s sudden guilty plea erases a February trial and locks in life-without-parole eligibility, closing the bloodiest random rampage in Raleigh history.
Austin Thompson, now 18, stood before Superior Court Judge Paul Ridgeway on Wednesday and admitted responsibility for every shot and stab wound that ended five lives on Oct. 13, 2022. The plea—entered three weeks before jury selection was set to start—carries a mandatory minimum of life without parole because he was 15 at the time of the attacks, making him ineligible for the death penalty under North Carolina law.
Timeline of a Random Rampage
Prosecutors say the massacre began inside the Thompson family home on Sahalee Way at 4:20 p.m.:
- 4:22 p.m. Thompson stabs and shoots his 16-year-old brother, James, in an upstairs bedroom.
- 4:25–4:35 p.m. He walks the Hedingham golf-course subdivision with a .22-caliber rifle, methodically shooting neighbors in their yards or driveways.
- 4:36 p.m. Off-duty Raleigh Police Officer Gabriel Torres, 29, is fatally shot while pulling out of his driveway still in uniform; his service weapon never cleared its holster.
- 4:40 p.m. Nicole Connors, 52, is gunned down on her front porch while cradling her dog.
- 4:42 p.m. Mary Marshall, 34, is shot while jogging along the cart path.
- 4:45 p.m. Susan Karnatz, 49, is killed while pushing a stroller two blocks away.
- 5:02 p.m. A police K-9 tracks Thompson to a wooded cul-de-sac; he fires once into his own head but survives.
Officers recovered 34 spent .22 casings scattered across a half-mile radius.
Inside the Courtroom: No Tears, No Excuses
Thompson appeared in a burgundy quarter-zip sweater and collared shirt, speaking only to confirm he understood each charge. When asked if medication affected his judgment, he replied, “I’m medicated, but I know what I’m doing.” Prosecutors detailed how the teen reloaded at least twice and paused between victims, evidence they planned to use to prove premeditation.
Families of the victims filled the first two rows; several wore pins bearing the victims’ faces. No one addressed the court during Wednesday’s brief hearing; impact statements are expected at the multi-day sentencing hearing set to begin Feb. 2.
Why the Plea Deal Was Inevitable
Defense attorneys had spent 18 months fighting to move the case to juvenile court and challenging North Carolina’s automatic transfer statute for 13- to 15-year-olds charged with first-degree murder. Both efforts failed at the appellate level, leaving Thompson facing five consecutive life sentences if convicted at trial. By pleading, he avoids the spectacle of a three-week trial and additional charges for assault on law-enforcement officers who exchanged fire with him in the woods.
Wake County District Attorney Lorrin Freeman told reporters outside court that prosecutors agreed not to stack extra attempted-murder counts on top of the five murder convictions, ensuring the plea could not later be appealed on technical grounds.
Community Still Counting the Invisible Wounds
Hedingham, a planned community of 4,200 homes built around a public golf course, has installed 24 license-plate cameras and hired private security since the shootings. Property values dipped 7 % in the immediate aftermath, according to Wake County tax data, and neighborhood association minutes show a 300 % spike in home-security-system permits.
Raleigh Police Chief Estella Patterson announced the creation of the Officer Gabriel Torres Community Safety Grant last fall, funding youth gun-violence prevention programs with $250,000 annually—money that will now be paired with a civil settlement against Thompson’s parents’ homeowner-insurance policy, finalized last month for an undisclosed sum.
Sentencing Phase: Victims’ Stories Will Fill the Record
Judge Ridgeway will consider mitigating factors such as Thompson’s age and documented ADHD diagnosis against aggravators including the multiple victims and the killing of a law-enforcement officer. North Carolina law allows life without parole for minors only after an individualized hearing; the defense is expected to call mental-health experts while prosecutors present victim-impact testimony from more than 30 relatives and neighbors.
Whatever the final sentence, Thompson will be transferred from juvenile custody to the Department of Adult Correction immediately after the hearing, closing a case that has haunted Raleigh for 40 months.
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