New York Post
December 12, 2013
The family of a slain Idaho man who came to the Big Apple chasing dreams of being a rock star wiped away tears Tuesday as Brooklyn prosecutors opened their case against his alleged killer.
“I want to see justice. I don’t care whether he robbed him or what the situation was, but my son didn’t deserve to die,” Beverly Thibodeau said of her son, Troy Young.
Young, 29, was shot dead in his Carroll Gardens apartment in 2009.
Troy Young’s mother Beverly Thibodeau at court with her husband Michael.Photo: Gregory P. Mango
Prosecutors say Tyshawn Augustus, 27, killed Young in a sex-for-drugs hookup that devolved into a robbery.
It all ended, prosecutors said, with Young dead and the convicted drug dealer making off with his Fender Stratocaster guitar.
“They were planning to meet for the purpose of engaging in sex for drugs,” Assistant DA James Leeper said, adding that prior to the shooting, the two men had chatted over the phone about the exchange.
“The actual encounter turned out very differently. It turned into a fatal encounter,” Leeper said.
Young’s family sat stoically in the Brooklyn Supreme Court gallery.
“There are no words. I wish they had the death penalty,” said Young’s sister, Allyson Marotta, who dabbed both eyes with a tissue during the trial.
The case against Augustus rests on the phone contact between him and Young, the musician’s DNA that was found under Augustus’ fingernails and the expected testimony of a man who says Augustus recruited him to help with the robbery, prosecutors said.