BELFAST, Maine — After more than five hours of deliberation, a Waldo County jury late Friday afternoon found Luke Bryant guilty of criminal recklessness in the shooting death of his best friend, Tyler Seaney, in a Knox farmhouse in 2011.
He is being held without bail pending sentencing and faces up to 30 years in prison. The minimum sentence for the crime is four years.
“On behalf of the state of Maine, we’re very pleased with the verdict,” Assistant Attorney General Leane Zainea, who prosecuted the case, said outside the courthouse. “The family of Tyler Seaney is very satisfied with the verdict in this case.”
Both Seaney’s friends and family, and supporters of Bryant dissolved into quiet sobs in the courthouse after a court officer read the unanimous guilty verdict.
“There were two lives lost in this situation,” Bryant’s cousin, Jasmine Sawyer, said outside the courthouse later.
She and members of his church, the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints in Belfast, had been sitting behind the 20 year old, who continued to look straight ahead when the verdict was read.
“He’s a good person,” said Pamela Thomas of Morrill, who belongs to Bryant’s church. “He made a mistake. This is not who he really is.”
Defense attorney Steven Peterson of Rockport said he was “very disappointed” in the outcome and will be looking at the possibility of appealing the verdict.
Peterson said that although Bryant has not shown a lot of remorse or emotion during the trial, it is because he is a private person who keeps his emotions to himself.
“The loss of a friend is a huge loss to Luke,” the attorney said. “He did break down in this case for a long time after the shooting but you will not see it publicly.”
After the verdict was handed down, Zainea argued before Superior Court Justice Robert Murray that Bryant posed a flight risk and should be held without bail pending sentencing. During the trial and since March 2011, Bryant has been free on $100,000 surety bail. His father, Malcolm Bryant, lives in the Philippines and reportedly had encouraged his son to leave the country after he was arrested, according to the prosecutor.
“He’s not employed, and has very limited ties to this area,” Zainea said.
But Peterson countered that his client has been responsible with his bail conditions throughout the legal process and does not even have a passport.
“For the last year and a half, he’s been on bail conditions and has not had any problem during that entire period of time,” he said, adding that there’s no substantial risk that Bryant will pose a danger to himself or the community.
Murray said that because Bryant has now been convicted of a significant crime he would be held without bail.
As Bryant was hustled into a waiting law enforcement vehicle to be taken to Waldo County Jail in Belfast, his supporters gathered on the sidewalk, crying and telling him they loved him.
“He’s not a flight risk,” one young woman said. “His church members are family, too … he’s a beautiful person.”
Peterson had asserted in his closing statement Friday that his 20-year-old client had essentially been pressured by police into admitting that he had been playing the “scare game” with Seaney, 19, when he shot him on Feb. 19, 2011, with a Mossberg Model A shotgun.
Seaney’s girlfriend, Whitney Canfield, told police the night of the shooting that Bryant and Seaney used to play the scare game, pointing and dry-firing guns at each other in order to startle the other person. Bryant did eventually tell police during a long interview a couple days after the fatal shooting that he hadn’t known the shotgun was loaded when he dry-fired it at his friend.
But during the 911 call made just after the shooting, which jurors heard Tuesday morning, an emotional and distraught Bryant didn’t mention the game when he told the dispatcher what had happened, Peterson said.
“Luke’s statements are consistent throughout. He didn’t mention any games,” Peterson said.
Instead, Bryant told them he had been clearing, or opening the shotgun in the kitchen in preparation for cleaning it and loading it for use the next day while talking to Seaney, the attorney said. At first, Bryant told police detectives that he did not know exactly how the gun went off, killing Seaney with a shotgun blast to the neck. Peterson said his story remained consistent during hours of police interviews.
“The thing [Bryant] really cares about is the loss of his best friend. He wasn’t making things up,” the attorney said.
But at the end of a three-and-a-half-hour-long interrogation at the Waldo County Sheriff’s Office days after the shooting, Bryant did eventually crack, according to his attorney.
He told them whatever they wanted him to say, he would say it, “just to get this over with,” Peterson said.
The scare game is an integral part of the decision the jury has to make, the attorney said, adding that to find Bryant guilty they must find him criminally reckless, and not simply reckless.
“Both Tyler and Luke used firearms recreationally. They used them in a way that almost any of us in here would consider reckless,” Peterson said. “I submit to you that it was reckless — but not criminal.”
Zainea said in her own closing remarks that police gave Bryant ample opportunity to tell them he had lied when he told them that he had been playing the scare game when he shot Seaney, but he did not. She said the 911 tape made after the shooting was difficult to listen to “because of this defendant’s conduct.”
“It was his decision to pull the trigger, not knowing whether that gun was loaded or not,” Zainea said. “It was his choice … he was trying to scare Tyler, because Tyler had gotten him with an Airsoft [pellet] gun earlier in the day.”
Peterson told jurors there are no winners in this case.
“We are surrounded in this society with guns,” the defense attorney said. “In a society that elevates gun use and gun rights almost to the point of religion, you are going to have accidents.”
But Zainea used a much stronger word in her own summation of the case.
“That conduct was criminally negligent,” she said of Bryant’s actions. “That conduct was manslaughter.”
Justice Murray instructed the jurors on the law they needed to decide, telling them that in order to find Bryant guilty they had to find evidence that proved beyond a reasonable doubt that he had committed reckless or criminally negligent manslaughter.
Criminal recklessness in this case required that the nature and purpose of Bryant’s conduct grossly deviate from reasonable standards of conduct, Murray said.
The jury began to deliberate the case at about 10:15 a.m. Friday and issued its decision shortly before 4 p.m.
Bryant’s sentencing hearing has been scheduled to take place at 1 p.m. Wednesday, Oct. 3, at Waldo County Superior Court.



Sorry, but anyone who thinks guns are toys, to be used in “scare games,” deserves prison. Whether he was engaged in such play that day makes no difference. He has admitted to “dry-firing” weapons as a form of horseplay. If that is not criminal recklessness, I don’t know what is.
You’ve got that right!
So what you’re saying is that “nearly 60% of Americans” deserves prison?
If it results in the death of another then probably…do you suggest people can just kill each other and cry oops and walk away to play again. If he hadn’t been found guilty his rights to carry a gun and play his games would still be intact that would be scary. Who knows what his sentence will be hopefully not too much but certainly never to own, hold or look at a dangerous weapon again.
No winners in this story…this is sad ….good kids in school, good friends,..stupid dicission makers…..very sad……
…
This was a witch hunt. This kid did not maliciously or intentionally gun
his best friend down. It was a stupid accident and I sure hope his
lawyer plans to appeal! This is not justice. This kid has to somehow
live with the fact that he accidentally killed his best friend. He does
not need to sit in jail to stew over that fact for the next 20-30
years. He needs to go out and educate other teens and adults about how
to safely use a gun. That would be more of a justified sentence than
putting this young guy in jail to rot!!!! Shame on this District
Attorney for going after this charge to begin with!!!!
just pointing out.. “this Kid”..is a Man..
And both “men” engaged in this stupidity so that makes them both stupid. Either one could have ended up dead. To send this “man” to jail is ridiculous….they were both in fault and it was an accident. Is there no such thing as a plain and simple accident anymore? If I am driving along in my car and a bee stings me and I cross over the line and kill a family, are you going to send me up the river for 30 yrs? I cannot help the bee stung me any more than this kid could have guessed the gun had a bullet in it (when he could swear it was empty)!!!!!!! ACCIDENT!
Are you kidding? Getting stung by a bee or having a medical event occur is totally different than pointing a gun at someone and pulling the trigger…not that I believe he should be thrown away but he did use a gun in a reckless manner…a better comparison might be someone texting and driving who crosses the center line and hits another car resulting in a death…how was the texter supposed to know another car would be coming at that exact time. They would still be held accountable ans so should Luke. Sad but preventable incident.
all I said was..he is a man..but every gun, at every moment is treated like its loaded..no exceptions…
worked on a farm up in the county. was laying on my back working on a harvester when
my bosses father-in-law (80) came back from bird hunting. shotgun under his arm pointed at the ground. next pointed at my face..
told him to move it. and he said oh it’s not loaded.
you don’t point a gun a something unless you intend to shoot it.
I been shot in the thigh..by an pellet gun..they didnt think it was loaded..imagine if it was a bullet..I agree Zeb, glad your here to tell the story..like I said “NO EXCEPTIONS”
Driver distraction is against the law now…..
“I cannot help the bee stung me any more than this kid could have guessed the gun had a bullet in it (when he could swear it was empty)” this here cracks me up. You can swear it was empty all you want but until you actually pull the bolt back and look in the chamber to physically see, feel that the weapon is empty then you can say it was unloaded with 100% factual information. Oh and can you tell me the first rule of weapons handling? My guess is No so I’ll tell you. First you open the weapon and inspect the chamber to see if there is a live or spent round still in the chamber. If so you unload the weapon of the live or spent round. Close the chamber place weapon on safe. Those are the First 2 rules of safe handling of a weapon. My Second point The last thing they say in any weapons safety course is Never point the weapon at anything you don’t intend to kill or shoot. So you tell me accident or not?
I was brought up around guns. The first two things my dad taught me as a boy was 1, you don’t point a gun at something you don’t intend to eat, or at someone that doesn’t intend to take your life or your families life or intends to do malicious harm to you or yours… 2 was make sure the goddamned thing ain’t loaded!! Thats just common sense really. This is just another reason why this generation coming up cannot take responsibility for things they have done, and its because the generation that has raised them has given them passes and infinite amounts of second chances. He deserves to spend some time in prison, for sure. Probably not 20 to 30 years, but he certainly deserves some time in the pokey…
this kid gets to live and breath for the rest of his life!
Trust me, he is a kid. Age has nothing to do with maturity.
agree to disagree..BUT..he was old enought to have guns..he is old enough for consequences
He hasn’t been sentenced yet….perhaps the sentence will reflect one more closely with one who kills a friend while being reckless in a car and not the thirty years…that would be too hard in my opinion. But not to have any time and to be educating others on proper safety of a firearm is pretty out there seeings the lack of respect shown regarding a firearm.
he actuall needs to pay for his crime. An accident? Yes. But it was also manslaughter. I do not want to see this man sitting in jail for ten years. But he does need to be incarcerated.
He was charged by the State, tried and found guilty by a jury of his peers. That’s not a witch hunt, it is a textbook example of how the criminal justice system was designed to work.
Mr. Peterson will no doubt appeal, that’s how lawyers make their money. This was a just verdict and in the end the appeal will be denied and the verdict will stand.
As for him needing to go out and educate other people about gun safety, given the crime he committed I think he’s the last person we need doing that.
Ditto Dan Troop! I just can’t picture this guy becoming a motivational speaker. His situation is no different than a drunk or texter who wipes out a person or family. Their intent is not to kill but there has to be a severe consequence to such poor judgment and reckless disregard for others. I can’t imagine people being so friggin reckless w/guns. Seriously? This guy should be taken ‘off the streets’ for a while (30 years is way too extreme though).
Your comment needs to be at the top of the page, not in a reply. I suggest you re-post this for all to read.
Honestly, its not really that brilliant. I don’t believe it really contributes anything great to the subject at hand. I do believe most people of even normal intelligence can reach all those same conclusions on their own. Alas the world must be a rather shallow place when mediocrity is praised as greatness.
I’m sorry DevilDude. Did I steal your thunder?
Nope, not at all. But, judging by some of your comments on my posts/in relation to me, clearly I stole some of yours. UMAD?!
Thanks.
Why would he be the last person to teach people the consequences of reckless gun use? Drivers who kill people while drinking and driving do “talks” all the time. How is this different? He has a powerful story that makes people think.
I did not say that he should be the last person to teach people the consequences of reckless gun use. What I said was that he is the last person who should be teaching other people gun safety since he clearly never taught himself and knows nothing about the subject. I have no doubt that after he spends 10 to 12 years in prison he will be more than able to teach about the consequences of reckless gun use!
maybe you should do what your user name is and check back into reality. He was pointing an actual weapon not a toy airsoft or paintball gun at his friend and he pulled the trigger. And Im sorry but according to Websters definition of accident “Literally, a befalling; an event that takes place without one’s foresight or expectation; an undesigned, sudden, and unexpected event; chance; contingency; often, an undesigned and unforeseen occurrence of an afflictive or unfortunate character; a casualty; a mishap; as, to die by an accident”.( http://www.websters-online-dictionary.org/definitions/accident). Its not like they were out hunting and he shot his friend. He knowingly picked up the weapon,failed to clear it, which is negligent, and pointed at his friend and pulled the trigger. Now what happened is tragic and could’ve been prevented. Sounds to me like in his haste to scare his friend he threw aside all gun safety which he already had by playing this game before and pulled the trigger with a live round in the weapon. Oh and by the way even if he hadn’t been found guilty he had stated “he had been clearing, or opening the shotgun in the kitchen in preparation for cleaning it and loading it for use the next day” the last time I checked it is illegal to transport a loaded weapon in a vehicle,or any means of transportation, unless you have a concealed weapons permit. So either way he was doing something that could’ve been criminally charged to him. What happened was tragic and I know with out a doubt he feels horrible for the loss of his friend but when it boils down to it what he was doing was negligent and criminally mischievous. Just think if this had been any of your children you’d be feeling the same way so stop acting like your all more higher than every one else and open your eyes and look at all the facts before you go griping about how someone should or shouldn’t be going to jail.
How did that gun wind up loaded during this particular game? Accidents may happen, but are you sure that this was not intentional? Even if it was not, he had a jury trial, and 12 good people came to the same conclusion, that he was guilty of criminal conduct, not accidental conduct.
Very sorry to hear this kid was found criminal. I think if the lad had choosen a judge instead of a jury he would be a free man today. Kids play stupid games all the time and nobody gets hurt. To play these type of games, if that is what he was doing, and how can that be proven beyond reasonable doubt, shows lack of parenting and firearm education. As parents today continue to be spaced out on methadone and let their kids be raised by x-box, the tv, social media and everything other than them expext these types of incidents to rise. A kid is dead and this kid is responsible for that death and i think he should do some time in the slammer but to prove it “criminal”. I don’t know, if the kid is telling the truth then the legal system failed this kid today. I hope the jury was correct.
In the mean time, it is more important then ever to own a gun in todays world but equally as important to spend time training the individuals on proper use, care and skill.
Spoken like a true member of the GOP.
First off, I guess I should preface my comments by saying that I must be getting old and crochety because I strongly object to 19 and 20 year old boys being called men. I would call them (especially in these types of cases) testosterone fueled males trying to achieve some type of rite of passage or at the very least engaging in games of one-upmanship. I was married to one of them way back when and have seen my own offspring safely thru it. Thank goodness!!
I truly believe that if anyone should ever be asked to come in for any questioning for any reason or no reason at all the first response is “NO, not without a lawyer.” Law enforcement officers are allowed to say anything they want, including outright lies, in order to elicit the responses they seek. Please bear in mind that these officials have a high school education and then perhaps a few weeks or months training! That is all!! Do not go up against these Barney Fife types without someone who really does know the law at your side!
nooo…, they are men.
Sounds like you or your family have had some bad personal experiences with Johnny Law. I’ve always found that if you haven’t done anything wrong then do don’t need the advise of a lawyer.
You really believe its possible for people to do nothing wrong? What world did you grow up in? The cops do wrong things all the time and with all these new laws and acts and bill since 9/11 they can basically do what they like. So while you might say “I have noting to hide” when they start looking into your private life, you might be singing a different tune, or do you not believe in privacy? I dont either, actually… Really I feel like there is nothing like strangers in blue suits watching you and your wife get intimate, really helps to add some flavor and fire to the experience.
Read moar Orwell, please.
Please add more tinfoil to the hat!
Haha! U SO FUNNY!!! A one sentence ad hominem. Brilliant Mr. Troop, absolutely brilliant. I will now no longer take anything you say seriously, as you are clearly unable to have an intelligent debate without resorting to childish measures and therefore I find it very hard to believe that anything you have to say could potentially be worthwhile.
How did you know I had a tinfoil hat? Are you the guy I bought it from? Id kinda like my money back, as its falling apart. You didn’t really do that good of a job. I mean, I didn’t expect a masterpiece but itd have been nice if you could have actually made me one instead of giving the one you have been wearing your whole life…
If I am wearing a tinfoil hat, its only because you made it for me while your idealistic society and way of life died before you, but, you failed to notice because you do not have eyes of your own, like so many others in this sad, sad world.
INDEFINITE DETENTION.
Only personal experience comes from having cops in the family and listening to shop talk. Some of it would shock you. And whether or not a person has done anything wrong really doesn’t matter. Representation is always your best bet.
luke bryant knew what happened that night and lied about it. The maine state police questioned him legally by the information given to them by the experts. The story he told on the stand contradicted the facts presented by ballistics experts and the chief medical examiner. Lawyer or not, the facts are the facts. There was all the evidence… I think he should get more time for lying about how it all went down… Negligence and recklessness ended a young man’s life way too soon. Yes tragic, but lying under oath is not the way to score points with the judicial system.
Let it be known that the defendant’s choice to void his Miranda Rights will now land him in jail. This is essentially a case in which the defendant (Luke Bryant) talked his way into jail, his own statements to the police being the difference between a accident and a criminal recklessness charge. Anything you say CAN and WILL be used against you!
Although I don’t believe that the defendant should be let off without repercussion, I believe that the criminal justice system is not the best venue for dealing with him, he’s so young. A better outcome would have been a ban on him ever owning a firearm, community service, counseling and reparations to the family of the victim (paying for the funeral).
“Anything you say CAN and WILL be used against you!” I believe that is #2 of the Miranda Rights and the last I knew, once you are convicted of a felony you are prohibited from ever owning a firearm again so I believe that outcome is covered.
I do not know who taught this guy to handle firearms, or how they got away with dry firing at each other before someone saw this and put a stop to it. I, in all my life, have never heard of such irresponsible behaviour, it is a slap in the face to those who have spent a lifetime safely handling and using firearms. To own a gun, is a huge responsibility and we have to protect our rights. The outcome here was just a matter of time.
I saw him that night when it happened he was not bloody or upset. Now he shows remorse?? No he’s right where he should be. the other times he has shown up here again no remorse shown.
Maybe he’s part of the 1 in 88 who are on the autistic spectrum, and not tested as a child years ago? He is having trouble getting employment too?
No, I think he’s got job security now, making license plates for Mainers and napkin holders to be sold at the Maine State Prison Showroom in Thomaston.
Who are you to decide if he shows remorse or not by seeing him so infrequently? People act differntly to differnet situations. Thats what makes us human.
That is a complete falsehood! I was with him the next day when he was still wearing the same clothes, which were covered in blood from performing CPR on his best friend for more than 20 minutes! The 911 tape clearly showed that he was frantic and almost hysterical. Get your so-called “facts” straight. He has shown plenty of remorse, as seen by the jury, police and court observers on the police tapes, as well as seen by friends and family members repeatedly over the last year and a half.
Guns don’t kill people — idiots do.
Sounds like these “air soft” guns have contributed to the unsafe actions of users of real firearms. TREAT ALL GUNS LIKE REAL GUNS, FAKE OR NOT.
He was charged by the State, tried and found guilty by a jury of his peers. That’s not a witch hunt, it is a textbook example of how the criminal justice system was designed to work.
Mr. Peterson will no doubt appeal, that’s how lawyers make their money. This was a just verdict and in the end the appeal will be denied and the verdict will stand.
As for him needing to go out and educate other people about gun safety, given the crime he committed I think he’s the last person we need doing that.
Why is it that people who knowingly and intentionally only get 15-20 year sentences? I will be interested to see the sentence in this case as what he did was downright stupid but I have no doubt in my mind that it was an accident and he did not intend to hurt his friend. That being said, our justice system has failed us if this young man is sentenced to anything more than a few years. There are rapists and child molesters who receive less time and in my mind what he did is far less malicious than taking the innocence of a child.
Judges and prosecutors don’t really value the lives of men and boys. Assistant Attorney General Leane Zainea has a track record of going wild prosecuting men who accidentally or under tragic circumstances cause the death of another. But when it’s women who cause death or even commit outright premeditated murder, this same prosecutor has come out singing to a completely different tune about how the women should not be punished. Murderous women go free but men are hunted and sent to life in prison for lesser acts. Just Google her name.
And Robert Murray does not act as a judge of the law but more like a second prosecutor tipping the scales against men and boys from the bench. Don’t count on him to go easy on this boy at sentencing.
The people who run this racket are monsters.
I hope this is not the case…however do you think it’s o.k. To use a gun in the manner…19 years old and sitting outside the bathroom waiting to scare the kid, also happened the weekend before. I don’t think he should get any longer sentence than someone who is dangerous in a vehicle and takes the life of another but certainly he needs to be held accountable for the death of another person.
Like DevilDude, please add more tinfoil to the hat!!!
How does this post have anything to do with me? You sir are a piece of work. Her post contains nothing in relation to mine at all. You bringing me up is completely uncalled for and ignorant. You sir must be a real man. How do you know so much about tinfoil hats, anyway?
Like DanTroop, lets all resort to ad hominem’s and being children. It easy and fun!
You and a few others seem to be ignoring the fact that he was found guilty by a jury, not Judge Murray or Assistant Attorney General Zainea.
Not sure what murderous women your talking about. Please enlighten us.
I’m incensed that the Mormons are claiming him as their own. He hasn’t considered himself a Mormon for a very long time. BTW: I’m the guy who led him out of that cult.
We all only get one chance in this life and to imprison someone for negligence (even criminal negligence) is _not_ justice.
Luke identified himself to the police as being a member of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, Gardiner.
I’ll also add that it was mostly LDS members who were there to support him this past week. Where were you and the rest of his “friends”?
when you pull the trigger on a gun you are responsible for whatever happens there can be no mistakes you cant take a bullet back and until this is understood you should not have a gun one young man already has a life sentance i wonder if they both will get the same.
When two-time Democratic presidential candidate Adlai Stevenson was 12 years old he accidentally killed a 16-year-old family friend while showing off with a rifle he assumed was not loaded. He was not prosecuted and relatively few know of this dark event in his early life. Stevenson rarely spoke of what happened but the event marked him deeply and caused him to resolve to make something of his life by serving others. On one rare occasion when he was governor of Illinois Stevenson did speak of this tragedy, telling the father of a young man who accidentally killed a friend in an automobile accident of his own experience and concluding with the advice to the father to tell his son that “he now has to live for two.”
As someone who once occasionally looked after Luke when he was a little boy I have some idea of some of the difficulties not of his own making he struggled with and how it was possible for him to lack the functional maturity a decade or so later that allowed him to get himself into the terrible trouble he did. My heart goes out to him, as it does, of course, to the other boy.
If anything good is to come out of this sad business it will be because Luke understands “he now has to live for two” and acts accordingly.