A 17-year-old victim of sex trafficking who killed a man she accused of raping her received a deferred prison sentence on Tuesday and was ordered by an Iowa court to pay restitution to the dead man’s family.
Lewis said Brooks had raped her multiple times in the weeks before his death, and that the 28-year-old man who trafficked her had forced her at knifepoint to go to Brooks’s apartment.
In June 2020, Lewis, in a fit of rage, grabbed a knife and stabbed Brooks, killing him in the process.
In 2021, Lewis pleaded guilty to willful injury and involuntary manslaughter, charges that are punishable by up to 10 years in prison each. On Tuesday, Polk County District Judge David M. Porter deferred both prison terms and instead sentenced Lewis to five years of supervised probation.
If Lewis violates any part of her probation, she could be sent to prison. In addition, Lewis was ordered to pay $150,000 in restitution to Brooks’s family.
“This court is presented with no other option,” Porter said about the restitution, which is mandatory under Iowa law.
The judge said he was concerned that Lewis sometimes didn’t want to follow the rules at the juvenile facility where she stayed while her case moved through the court.
“The next five years of your life will be full of rules you disagree with, I’m sure of it,“ he said. ”This is the second chance that you’ve asked for. You don’t get a third.”
Safe Harbor Laws
Prosecutors did not dispute that Lewis was trafficked and sexually assaulted. However, they did point out that at the time she stabbed Brooks, the man was asleep, and thus not an immediate danger to the girl.Prosecutors argued that Lewis’s action left Brooks’s children without a father and that she failed to take responsibility for the stabbing.
Lewis’s sentencing has triggered a heated debate over safe harbor laws for trafficking victims in Iowa. Such laws could offer protection for trafficking victims against liability or penalty provided certain conditions are met.
Earlier in 2022, the Iowa House passed a bill to create a safe harbor law. However, it failed to pass the Senate due to concerns raised by law enforcement groups.
Stephan Bayens, commissioner at the Iowa Department of Public Safety, pointed out that the proposed bill provided trafficking victims with blanket immunity, something he was worried about.
In an update to the fundraiser, Schipper said that after the restitution is covered, the rest of the funds collected will be given to Lewis to continue her education or start a business, and also so she can help other young victims of sex crimes.