Tag Archive for 'Trent DiGiuro'

Ragland files appeal in civil case

Shane Ragland

Shane Ragland

Shane Ragland, who has admitted that he shot and killed UK football player Trent DiGiuro in 1994, has filed for an appeal of his civil court case.

Ragland’s filing comes nearly a month after a Fayette judge refused 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.

Ragland’s attorney, David Broderick of Bowling Green, filed for the appeal Monday in Fayette Circuit Court in response to Circuit Judge Thomas Clark’s Jan. 7 ruling. Ragland had 30 days to file a notice of appeal.

Ragland, who was arrested in 2000, was convicted in 2002 of murdering Trent DiGiuro, but the Kentucky Supreme Court overturned the verdict in 2006.

He 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 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 prevented him from 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 amount awarded, if it stands, will be the largest ever to come out of Fayette County and the second-largest ever in Kentucky.

Ragland and his attorneys did not attend the civil trial, but filed a motion in September 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 last month. His order represented the strongest public statements he has made in the eight years he has presided over the criminal and civil cases.

“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,” 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.”

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Ragland wants new trial after $63.3 million verdict

By Brandon Ortiz
bortiz@herald-leader.com

Shane Ragland wants a new civil trial in the 1994 shooting death of a University of Kentucky football player because he thinks the $63.3 million verdict against him is excessive.

In a motion filed in Fayette Circuit Court, Ragland’s attorney, David Broderick of Bowling Green, said the jury in the August wrongful death trial acted “under the influence of passion or prejudice or in disregard of the evidence.”

Ragland was sued by the family of Trent DiGiuro, who was slain on Woodland Avenue in July 1994 as he was celebrating his upcoming 21st birthday.

Neither Ragland nor his attorneys attended the trial.

Broderick could not immediately be reached for comment Tuesday afternoon.

Shane Ragland

Shane Ragland

DiGiuro’s father, Mike, had a one-word reaction to the news.

“Whatever,” he said.

DiGiuro noted that Ragland had offered to settle the case for $50 million, a largely symbolic offer because he has few assets to his name.

Ragland pleaded guilty last year to second-degree manslaughter.

He was convicted of murder in 2002, but the Kentucky Supreme Court overturned the verdict.

A DiGiuro family attorney, David Pratt of Lexington, said Ragland’s motion isn’t going anywhere because he didn’t show up for the civil trial.

“It doesn’t really make a lot of sense,” Pratt said. “If they don’t really intend to pay any of it to begin with, then what difference does it make?”

The motion does not state whether Ragland would appear at a second civil trial.

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