Rock-throwing that injured teacher results in jail sentences


              FILE - In this Tuesday, Oct. 21, 2014 file photo, Sharon Budd, right, speaks with her husband Randy after ringing the "victory" bell to celebrate her discharge from Geisinger HealthSouth Rehabilitation Hospital in Danville, Pa. Three young men will soon learn their sentences for a rock-throwing incident last year that caused severe brain trauma to an Ohio schoolteacher as she passed through Pennsylvania in the dead of night on Thursday, Sept. 3, 2015.  (AP Photo/Ralph Wilson, File)
FILE - In this Tuesday, Oct. 21, 2014 file photo, Sharon Budd, right, speaks with her husband Randy after ringing the "victory" bell to celebrate her discharge from Geisinger HealthSouth Rehabilitation Hospital in Danville, Pa. Three young men will soon learn their sentences for a rock-throwing incident last year that caused severe brain trauma to an Ohio schoolteacher as she passed through Pennsylvania in the dead of night on Thursday, Sept. 3, 2015. (AP Photo/Ralph Wilson, File)

LEWISBURG, Pa. (AP) - Three young men apologized to their victim on Thursday after a judge sentenced them to time behind bars for throwing a rock from an interstate overpass, striking the woman in the head and causing her severe brain damage.

A judge ordered Dylan Lahr, Tyler Porter and Keefer McGee to serve at least 4½ years, 1 year and 10 months, and 11½ months for the July 2014 attack on Interstate 80 that injured Sharon Budd.

"I thought the judge would be just, and he was," Budd, a middle school language arts teacher from Uniontown, Ohio, said after the hearing. "It's hard to look at their faces and not feel bad for them."

The minimum sentences are the earliest they could be released from county jail or state prison. All three have much longer maximum sentences and will be on probation for many years. They also were ordered to pay restitution.

Lahr, who was given credit for spending the past year in jail, was shackled around the waist as he asked Budd directly for forgiveness.

"I'm sorry, Sharon," he said. "I feel horrible for what has happened and for what you and your family had to go through."

Porter said he was sorry and that he wished every day the attack had not occurred.

McGee drew a response from Union County District Attorney Pete Johnson when he told Budd: "I shouldn't have let my friends do what they did."

"Calling these things bad choices or mistakes, I think, demeans what it is, which is the expression of criminal intent, the criminal choice," Johnson told Union County Judge Michael Sholley. "And that deserves punishment."

Budd has already endured seven surgeries after the rock that crashed through the front windshield of her car destroyed much of her skull, part of her brain and one eye. She and her husband were passengers as their daughter drove them through Pennsylvania, on their way to see a show in New York, when the attack occurred.

A fourth man, Dylan's brother Brett Lahr, previously began serving at least 18 months after pleading no contest to a conspiracy count.

Authorities say the rock-throwing culminated a day of troublemaking that included shoplifting steaks, breaking a window in a neighbor's home and driving through a cornfield, causing damage.

Dylan Lahr and Porter will serve their sentences in state prison, where Brett Lahr is currently incarcerated. McGee was allowed work release while serving his time in the county jail.

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