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A white Kansas City man has been charged with two felonies for shooting Black teen Ralph Yarl

 The home at 1100 NE 115th Street in Kansas City's Northland where Ralph Yarl was shot shows evidence of being tagged and egged.
Carlos Moreno
/
KCUR 89.3
The home at 1100 NE 115th Street in Kansas City's Northland where Ralph Yarl was shot shows evidence of being tagged and egged.

An 85-year-old white Northland resident was charged with two felony counts in the shooting of a Black 16-year-old, Clay County Prosecuting Attorney Zachary Thompson announced Monday.

Andrew D. Lester was charged with assault in the first degree and with armed criminal action. He’s accused of shooting Ralph Yarl twice late Thursday night after Yarl mistakenly knocked on his front door.

The assault charge is a class A felony, Thompson said. If found guilty, Lester faces no fewer than 10 years and up to 30 years or life in prison.

“As with any serious case, we approached this one in an objective and impartial manner," Thompson said. "We look forward to obtaining a just result.”

Thompson said there will be no hate crime charge filed — which many had called for — because hate crime charges in Missouri carry a lower range of penalties than the two felonies.

Yarl was supposed to pick up his twin brothers at a home on 115th Terrace, but went to the wrong address. According to the family, Lester shot Yarl once in the head and again after he fell. Police said they questioned the shooter and held him for 24 hours, but ultimately released him.

Lester’s house was defaced with graffiti Monday. The yellow house with green shutters has a fenced-in yard and a sign posted that says, “This property is protected by surveillance cameras.”

Neighbors described him as a nice elderly man who was a military veteran.

James Everhart, who lives two doors down from the house where the shooting took place, said he doesn’t believe race played a role in the shooting.

“There ain’t no race to this story,” Everhart said. “The seemingly-hate activists who show up and protest only divide people. The guy was scared. The guy just shot somebody!”

 Ralph Yarl was shot Thursday when he mistakenly rang the doorbell of a home in Clay County. He was picking up his brothers, who were at an address about a block away. Yarl is currently recovering at a local hospital.
Faith Spoonmore
/
GoFundMe
Ralph Yarl was shot Thursday when he mistakenly rang the doorbell of a home in Clay County. He was picking up his brothers, who were at an address about a block away. Yarl is currently recovering at a local hospital.

Thompson said there "was a racial component to the case."

Yarl’s case garnered national media attention and went viral on social media.

Vice President Kamala Harris tweeted that she and her husband, Doug, are praying for the Yarl family.

“Let's be clear: No child should ever live in fear of being shot for ringing the wrong doorbell,” Harris tweeted. “Every child deserves to be safe. That’s the America we are fighting for.”

Other groups roundly criticized the handling of the case. The African Methodist Episcopal Church Ministerial Alliance of the Midwest Conference referenced other well-known killings of Black boys.

“At what point do we admit that the color of fear is always black?" the group said in a statement. "In these moments, we remember that Emmett Till was just a little boy. Trayvon Martin was just a little boy. Tamir Rice was just a little boy."

A GoFundMe fundraiser to support Ralph Yarl raised more than $1.6 million by Monday afternoon. His aunt Faith Spoonmore started the fundraiser on Sunday to cover medical bills and therapy expenses.

“Life looks a lot different right now. Even though he is doing well physically, he has a long road ahead mentally and emotionally,” Spoonmore wrote on the fundraiser page. “The trauma that he has to endure and survive is unimaginable.”

Copyright 2023 KCUR 89.3

Peggy Lowe is an investigative reporter at KCUR in Kansas City.
Frank Morris is a national correspondent for NPR based at KCUR in Kansas City.