BERWICK STAR NEWS
Home » Uproar over teen’s sentence

Uproar over teen’s sentence

Jason Langhans was trying to stop two boys from fighting at a 16th birthday party when one of them turned on him.

He was hit in the head with a screwdriver and immediately collapsed to the ground as a brawl broke out.

The 17-year-old died in hospital three weeks later.

His attacker, who cannot be named, had gate crashed the party in Tooradin that evening in March 2021.

While drinking and smoking weed at a house earlier, he had armed himself after a friend told him “there might be trouble”.

The boy, who was also aged 17, grabbed a screwdriver.

He later drove that screwdriver almost 8cm into Jason’s brain.

“I hit one guy badly,” he was heard saying after leaving the party.

Justice Elizabeth Hollingworth said Jason had no chance to defend himself when he was fatally hit by the teen, as she sentenced him on Thursday 24 August.

“You were carrying a screwdriver to a party, which you were prepared to use as a weapon if there was any trouble,” she said.

“Jason was not behaving aggressively and had no weapon, you hit him without warning.”

Jason’s supporters shouted from the Supreme Court public gallery, as they learnt the now-18-year-old killer could walk free from prison in two years.

“Please be quiet, this is not a football stadium,” Justice Hollingworth said.

“This is a courtroom if you can’t behave appropriately, leave now.”

The teen had suffered a traumatic upbringing, growing up around bombings in Afghanistan, fleeing to Pakistan, Indonesia and then arriving in Australia by boat, the judge said.

There was no food or water on the boat and his siblings became unconscious on the journey.

He felt like a prisoner in a cage as he then spent two months at a Christmas Island detention centre and four months in Australian detention camps before settling in Geelong.

Justice Hollingworth took into account the teen’s trauma, young age, early offers to plead guilty and vulnerability if he was placed in an adult prison, in deciding his sentence.

She handed him a maximum six-year sentence and he must serve at least four years before he will be eligible for parole.

He has already spent just over two years in prison.

The judge requested the parole board consider transferring him to the youth justice system until he is 21.

Digital Editions


More News

  • Police van rammed, shots fired in Dandenong

    Police van rammed, shots fired in Dandenong

    Police have fired shots after a Jeep allegedly rammed their van and drove at the officers at a Dandenong motel on Thursday 22 January. Officers say they spotted the Jeep…

  • $1.3m Pearcedale Reserve upgrade gets underway

    $1.3m Pearcedale Reserve upgrade gets underway

    Construction has begun on a major upgrade to Pearcedale Reserve, with the $1.3 million Playground and Skate Park project set to transform the space into a more inclusive, family-friendly destination…

  • Looking Back

    Looking Back

    Purchase this photo from Pic Store: 142390 100 years ago 28 January 1926 OBSERVATIONS Dandenong citizens have received strict instructions from the ineffective and irritating Water Commission not to water…

  • ‘Can’t see it being mended’, Liberal MP Jason Wood says after Nationals ‘hissy fit’ breaks Coalition

    ‘Can’t see it being mended’, Liberal MP Jason Wood says after Nationals ‘hissy fit’ breaks Coalition

    Local Liberal MP Jason Wood has firmly backed Sussan Ley’s leadership against what he labels the Nationals’ latest “hissy fit” that resulted in the Coalition breaking apart for the second…

  • Soil clean-up wait continues

    Soil clean-up wait continues

    Purchase this photo from Pic Store: 522112 A giant asbestos-riddled soil mound in Bangholme’s Green Wedge still remains, despite an order for its removal by the end of 2025. In…