Teen shot in the head after ringing the wrong doorbell wants justice and a conviction for accused gunman, he tells ‘GMA’
CNN/Stylemagazine.com Newswire | 6/27/2023, 4:11 p.m.
Originally Published: 27 JUN 23 08:27 ET
Updated: 27 JUN 23 12:18 ET
By Lauren Mascarenhas, CNN
(CNN) — Ralph Yarl, the Missouri teen who was shot in the head after ringing the wrong doorbell, has spoken out for the first time in an interview on ABC’s “Good Morning America.”
“I’m just a kid and not larger than life because this happened to me,” Ralph told Robin Roberts in the interview that aired Tuesday. “I’m just gonna keep doing all the stuff that makes me happy. And just living my life the best I can, and not let this bother me.”
Ralph was shot in the head and arm when he went to the wrong house in his Kansas City neighborhood to pick up his siblings on April 13. He was 16 at the time.
The incident was among a string of shootings in which the victims appear to have been in the wrong place at the wrong time in a nation plagued by gun violence.
“Don’t come here ever again,” were the only words Andrew Lester, the 84-year-old White man accused of shooting the Black teen, said to him before he fired his gun, Ralph told Roberts. Lester is facing two felony charges in the shooting.
Lester said he thought Ralph was trying to break into the home and he was “scared to death” due to the boy’s size, according to the probable cause document obtained by CNN. Ralph is shorter than 6 feet and probably under 170 pounds, his aunt told CNN.
“I’m thinking there’s no way he’s actually going to shoot,” Ralph told “Good Morning America.” “Then, it happened.”
Ralph described running away from the house, bleeding from his head, yelling for help.
Since the shooting, Ralph has experienced headaches, trouble sleeping and difficulty concentrating, he said.
“You’re looking at a kid who took the SAT when he was in the eighth grade and now his brain has slowed,” Ralph’s mother Cleo Nagbe told Roberts. “Physically he looks fine, but there is a lot that has been taken from him.”
Ralph is past any feelings of hatred for Lester, he said, but believes Lester should be convicted for the alleged crimes.
“Justice is just the rule of the law, regardless of race, ethnicity and age,” Ralph said.
Lester was detained for less than two hours on the night of the shooting, according to the Kansas City Police Department detention unit, spurring outrage in the community and calls for charges against him. Almost a week later, Lester turned himself in and was released on bail.
The shooting fueled protests in Kansas City and spurred a “Unity Walk” in support of Ralph by an estimated 1,500 students at his school.
The conditions of Lester’s $200,000 bond prohibit him from having any type of weapon or having direct or indirect contact with Ralph or his family, according to Clay County Sheriff’s Office spokesperson Sarah Boyd.
A Missouri judge granted a motion in June to seal evidence in the criminal case against Lester after his attorneys argued the media coverage of the case would hinder his ability to get a fair hearing.