
A teenager who was sentenced to life in prison was denied a last request by the judge before being taken to prison.
Thomas Stein, 18, has been jailed for life for the murder of 15-year-old Kayla Rincon-Miller in March 2024, reports People.
Rincon-Miller was shot and murdered after Stein and his friend, Christopher Horne Jr, targeted her and two friends for a robbery as they were driving in a SUV his mother had rented from a cinema to a McDonald's in Cape Coral, Florida.
Stein and Horn were on the hunt for cars to burgle when they chanced upon the trio of girls. They drove by twice, flashed their lights in their faces and stopped the car with the intention of robbing them.
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Then, a gun went off at close range with deadly consequences.
As Stein and Horne fled the scene, Rincon-Miller lay dying as her friends tried to save her life. She would die shortly afterwards in hospital.
As well as being sentenced to life in prison for one felony count of first-degree murder on Friday, 10 July, he was also sentenced to three consecutive 15-year sentences for three counts of attempted robbery with a firearm. Totalling an additional 45 years.
Horne testified against Stein as part of a plea deal and was sentenced to 25 years in May, as per Court TV.
While in court for his sentencing, Stein requested to be able to hug his family goodbye, but was denied by the judge.

'I can't grant that request in here'
According to Court TV, Stein did not ask for a certain sentence, unlike his defence, who asked for the same 25 years Horne was given, but instead pleased to hug his family.
He reportedly asked Judge Nick Thompson: “If I could just ask you one thing, if before I walk out of the courtroom, if I could give my family a hug, if you’d allow that?”
However, Judge Thompson was unmoved by the request.
“I can’t grant that request in here," he said. "You can say goodbye, but you can’t have any physical contact.”
Stein spoke to his family before leaving the courtroom.
He maintained throughout the trail that while he was present at the time of Rincon-Miller's shooting, he was not the one who shot her.
“I didn’t know that robbery was going to occur, but it was my reaction in fleeing that ultimately played a major role in assisting the perpetrators,” he said at his sentencing, via Court TV.
“I know that it wasn’t my intentions, but the truth is it doesn’t change the result. It doesn’t change the fact that there was a life taken and innocent people were forever traumatised because of that.”
“That day I made a terrible decision.
“The decision to get behind the wheel was a total act of selfishness and something I regret and I’m ashamed of every day.”