Pubdate: Wed, 26 Apr 2006 Source: Sun-Sentinel (Fort Lauderdale, FL) Copyright: 2006 Sun-Sentinel Company Contact: http://www.sun-sentinel.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/159 Author: Missy Stoddard, South Florida Sun-Sentinel TEEN GETS 10 YEARS IN PRISON FOR DRUG-RELATED MURDER NEAR WEST PALM Timothy "TJ" Underwood was just 14 when he and two friends pumped one round apiece into family acquaintance Richard "Bear" Roberts following an all-night drug and alcohol binge at Underwood's mother's home west of West Palm Beach. Now 16, Underwood avoided a potential life sentence Tuesday by pleading guilty to a lesser charge of second-degree murder in connection with Roberts' killing. Circuit Judge Lucy Chernow Brown sentenced him to 10 years in prison followed by 10 years on probation. He was credited for 743 days already served. If all goes according to plan, Underwood will taste freedom several years before his mother, Angela Morgan, who in January was sentenced to 15 years for her role in the killing. Underwood is the fourth person to plead guilty in the case, leaving a single remaining defendant, Zachary Updike, 20. Roberts, a friend of Morgan's live-in boyfriend Donald Faircloth, was a known bully with a history of aggressive behavior, according to testimony at Morgan's November trial. Morgan claimed Roberts threatened her, her son and his friend the night of Feb. 8, 2004. Underwood hit Roberts with a baseball bat, knocking him unconscious, before Morgan, Faircloth, Underwood and Updike drove Roberts, who was still alive, to Dryden Road and dropped him in the brush. Underwood, Updike and Thomas Gamble later returned to the woods where each pumped a single shot into Roberts. Morgan, Faircloth and Gamble previously entered pleas in the case. Updike is charged with first-degree murder. Morgan, who had recently completed prison time for cocaine possession at the time of the killing, partied, drank and did drugs with her son and his friends, according to court testimony. Staples at the 2004 party included cocaine, Xanax and marijuana. Underwood's attorney, Glenn Mitchell, said his client was a victim of his environment. Faircloth was a drug dealer with at least 15 felony convictions. "Everybody believes [Underwood] never had a chance ...," Mitchell said. Morgan's sister, Tammy Colon, agreed with Mitchell's assessment. "Good luck, TJ," Colon yelled as deputies led her nephew from the courtroom. "He's a good kid with a childlike heart ... who was barely 14 when this happened," she said. - --- MAP posted-by: Jackl