25 Years for a Fatal Dispute: Florida Woman Sentenced in Shooting of Neighbor
NEW YORK BEACON — In court, Lorincz expressed remorse for her actions. “I am so sorry I took AJ’s life. I never intended to kill her,” she said, as Judge Robert Hodges weighed her lack of prior criminal record in opting not to impose the maximum penalty. However, the sentencing came as little solace to Owens’ family, who described the profound impact of losing her.
New York Beacon Staff Report
Pamela Dias stood in court and spoke not just as a grieving mother but as the voice of a family irreparably altered. “Our hopes, dreams, and future plans died the night Susan Lorincz killed my daughter,” she told the court. Her daughter, Ajike “AJ” Owens, a mother of four, was shot and killed by Lorincz in a case that sparked discussions about race, neighborhood disputes, and the boundaries of self-defense in Florida. Lorincz was sentenced to 25 years in prison after being convicted of manslaughter.
The incident occurred in June 2023, when tensions between the two neighbors escalated into violence. Lorincz, 59, admitted to shooting Owens through her apartment door during a confrontation after an earlier altercation involving Owens’ children. According to authorities, Lorincz had yelled at the children playing outside and thrown a roller skate at Owens’ 10-year-old son, striking him. When Owens approached Lorincz’s apartment to demand an explanation, the confrontation turned deadly.
In court, Lorincz expressed remorse for her actions. “I am so sorry I took AJ’s life. I never intended to kill her,” she said, as Judge Robert Hodges weighed her lack of prior criminal record in opting not to impose the maximum penalty. However, the sentencing came as little solace to Owens’ family, who described the profound impact of losing her.
The case drew attention to Florida’s legal system and its approach to self-defense claims. State Attorney Bill Gladson determined that insufficient evidence existed to pursue a second-degree murder charge, citing that Lorincz’s actions fell outside the protections offered by state law. This decision sparked debate among legal experts and advocates, many of whom questioned the broader implications of such cases on marginalized communities.
Owens’ death and Lorincz’s sentencing leave behind a legacy of unanswered questions about community conflict, systemic justice, and the human cost of neighborhood disputes. While a sentence was handed down, the pain of this tragedy will reverberate far beyond the courtroom, as both families grapple with the irrevocable consequences of that night.