In a tersely worded opinion, a Fayette judge refused Wednesday to throw out a record $60 million in punitive damages against Shane Ragland in the sniper-style shooting death of a University of Kentucky football player in 1994.
“This court … can find no greater act of reprehensibility than the premeditated, senseless killing of a young man about to enter the prime of his life, particularly in light of the purported motive,” Circuit Judge Thomas Clark wrote. “To lie in wait, in the dark of night, and assassinate a person for purportedly being blackballed from a fraternity years earlier, the court can find no greater reprehensible conduct.”
- Shane Ragland
- Trent DiGiuro
Ragland has admitted to fatally shooting Trent DiGiuro in front of a Woodland Avenue rental house while DiGiuro was celebrating his upcoming 21st birthday. Prosecutors have said Ragland was angry because he wrongly thought DiGiuro had dashed his hopes of getting into the fraternity.
DiGiuro’s family sued Ragland, and in August a jury awarded the family $63.3 million, including $3.3 million in lost wages.
The verdict, if it stands, will be the largest to ever come out of Fayette County and the second-largest ever in Kentucky.
Ragland and his attorneys did not attend the civil trial. But in September, they filed a motion asking for the verdict to be tossed out and requesting a new trial. They claimed the verdict was excessive, despite their earlier offer to settle the case for $50 million.
Clark overruled that motion in an order that became public Wednesday. His order represented the strongest public statements he has made in the eight years that he has presided over the criminal and civil cases.
“It sums up the way I feel,” said Trent DiGiuro’s father, Mike.
It was not clear Wednesday whether Ragland would appeal the ruling. His attorney, David Broderick of Bowling Green, and father did not immediately return phone messages.
The DiGiuro family’s attorney, David Pratt of Lexington, said Ragland would be required to post bond on the $63.3 million verdict.
Ragland’s attorneys have repeatedly claimed that he does not have any assets, so an appeal might be prohibitively expensive for him, Pratt said.
Ragland has 30 days to file a notice of appeal. After that window, the DiGiuros can begin trying to collect the judgment.
The family will have the right to force Ragland to testify under oath, attach liens to property, subpoena financial records and even force others — including, potentially, Ragland’s wealthy father, Jerry — to testify.
Mike DiGiuro said he doesn’t care whether the family ever collects anything. He just wants to make sure Ragland doesn’t live a life of luxury.
“Our goal is to keep him from having money,” said Mike DiGiuro, of Goshen. “I don’t necessarily need it; I just don’t want him to have it.”
The family will try to collect for the rest of Ragland’s life.
“I am going to make sure he never has a day of leisure in his life,” Mike DiGiuro said.
Under Kentucky law, the judgment will balloon at a rate of 12 percent a year until Ragland pays it off, Pratt said. In the first year, that would be an additional $7.5 million in interest owed to the DiGiuros.
Ragland accepted a plea deal in 2007 and pleaded guilty to second-degree manslaughter. His sentence was for time served plus an additional three days of home incarceration.
Ragland, who was arrested in 2000, was convicted of murder in 2002, but the Kentucky Supreme Court overturned the verdict in 2006.



You lose, O.J. jr.
see ya sucker!!!
Shane Ragland is a dirt bag as is his father. I hope he never has a dime to his name and his father’s riches are drained as well. I’m very glad Judge Clark ruled against this piece of garbage.
I am so sorry for the families and what they have to live through. I am glad Shane will have to pay for his actions. It is good to know that money can not buy everything. It’s time we set some examples to show what actions can cause. I lost a brother, 20 years old, to a drunk driver and NOTHING was ever done. The drunk had no license, stole a car, passed 2 cars in a no passing zone and killed my brother; leaving his unborn child without a father. That was years ago but I still can’t forget it. Sometimes people must pay the price and I think this is one of them. Thank you Judge Clark.
Good, he should be in jail, there are people in jail for lesser crimes, but in Ky. only some people pay for their crimes, basicly the poor people, or the middle class that can’t afford a high price lawyer.
I SERVED ON A JURY FOR A WEEK UNDER JUDGE CLARK. YOU GOTTA LOVE THIS GUY. WHAT’S RIGHT IS RIGHT…HE KNOWS WHAT IT IS AND HE ISN’T AFRAID TO SAY SO OR TO PUT IT INTO ACTION.
RAGLAND DESERVES NO MERCY….HE SHOWED NONE THAT FATEFUL NIGHT.