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Caption In 2017, Sean Urbanski (right) approached and fatally stabbed Army 1st Lt. Richard Collins III as he waited for a ride-share, on the University of Maryland, College Park campus.
Sean Urbanski, a former University of Maryland student who stabbed and killed a Black Army lieutenant at a bus stop in May 2017, was sentenced to life in prison for what prosecutors said was a racially motivated hate crime.
A Prince George s County Circuit Court judge handed down the life sentence for Urbanski, 25. However, the judge denied the prosecution s request for a sentence without parole. I m absolutely satisfied that justice was served, said Maryland State s Attorney Aisha Braveboy, whose office prosecuted the case.
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U.S. Army, University of Maryland Police Department via AP
Originally published on January 15, 2021 4:15 pm
Sean Urbanski, a former University of Maryland student who stabbed and killed a Black Army lieutenant at a bus stop in May 2017, was sentenced to life in prison for what prosecutors said was a racially motivated hate crime.
A Prince George s County Circuit Court judge handed down the life sentence for Urbanski, 25. However, the judge denied the prosecution s request for a sentence without parole. I m absolutely satisfied that justice was served, said Maryland State s Attorney Aisha Braveboy, whose office prosecuted the case. I think it is highly unlikely that he will be paroled, at least anytime soon, she added in an interview with NPR Friday. However, the judge made that decision based on certain objective factors like the fact that this was his first offense.
The man who fatally stabbed a 23-year-old Black man in 2017 was sentenced to life in prison Thursday.
Sean Urbanski, 25, apologized in court for killing 23-year-old Richard Collins III at a bus stop in 2017. He told the victim’s parents minutes before learning his sentence, that he would go back and switch places with Collins if he could.
On the night of the May 2017 stabbing, Collins was just three days away from graduating from Bowie State University and was visiting the University of Maryland College Park campus to celebrate. The newly commissioned second lieutenant in the Army was at a bus stop on the university’s campus with two friends, an Asian woman and a white man, at around 3 a.m. when an approaching Urbanski told him “Step left, step left if you know what’s best for you.”