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| Parnell gets 25 years to life for trying to buy little boy |
| By JUSTIN PRITCHARD, Associated Press Writer |
| (Updated Thursday, April 15, 2004, 3:25 PM) |
| OAKLAND, Calif. (AP) - A 72-year-old man who is one of California's most notorious child molesters was ordered to live out his life behind bars for trying to buy a 4-year-old boy for $500. |
| Kenneth Eugene Parnell, handcuffed to his wheelchair, was stoic as a judge sentenced him Thursday to 25 years-to-life for what prosecutors have characterized as his "last hurrah." |
| Though the boy wasn't real - a fiction created by the woman Parnell approached to fetch him a youngster and the authorities she told of his overture - a jury convicted Parnell on three felony charges, including attempted child stealing. |
| The prosecutor who successfully argued Thursday for the stiffest penalty under California's "three strikes" sentencing law emphasized that Parnell had a history of abducting and keeping young boys. |
| "He has been a danger to children his entire life," prosecutor Tim Wellman said. |
| Parnell already spent five years in prison during the 1980s for twice snatching boys as they walked home from school. |
| One of the boys, Steven Stayner, spent seven years as Parnell's "son" and was freed only after he helped free a second child Parnell abducted. Stayner's nightmare was told in the TV movie "I Know My First Name is Steven." |
| That past was prelude to another crime. |
| Police arrested Parnell in January 2003 and a jury convicted him in February after he asked the sister of his former caretaker to deliver a boy to his cluttered Berkeley apartment. |
| In exchange, Parnell offered $500 to Diane Stevens. Aware of Parnell's past, she went to police, who arrested Parnell after he gave Stevens $100 in exchange for the fictitious boy's birth certificate. Police searching Parnell's apartment found condoms, pornographic videos and sexual aids. |
| At trial, Wellman suggested Parnell wanted one "last hurrah." |
| In the weeks between when Parnell made his offer and police pounced, Stevens happened to see the TV docudrama about Stayner's ordeal. |
| "He wanted another Steven Stayner," she said outside court Thursday. |
| Along with the 1972 kidnapping of Stayner, Parnell had been convicted of kidnapping 5-year-old Timmy White in 1980. Stayner, then 14, later took White to police, saying he didn't want the boy to suffer his same ordeal. |
| Steven Stayner - whose brother, Cary, was sentenced to death last year for killing four women in Yosemite National Park - died in a motorcycle accident in 1989. |
| Wellman said he spoke this week with Stayner's mother and with White, both of whom pressed him to seek the maximum punishment. |
| Parnell's lawyer, Deborah Levy, said her client simply wanted to raise an abandoned boy and that "he did not at all harm or attempt to harm anyone in this community." |
| She argued that Parnell's age, failing health and the fact that he had no trouble with police for nearly 20 years should mitigate his sentence. |
| In leveling the maximum term, however, Alameda County Superior Court Judge Julie Conger called Parnell "a poster child for the three strikes law." |
| Outside court, Levy said she will file appeal papers. Parnell will be transferred to San Quentin State Prison in the next two weeks, she said. |
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