PORTLAND, Maine (AP) — A judge has ruled an 18-year-old man charged with murder in the killing of a paddleboarder in Maine is competent to stand trial.
The death of Sunshine “Sunny” Stewart, 48, of St. George, last year shocked the community around Crawford Pond in rural Union, Maine. Authorities charged Deven Young of Frankfort, Maine, with murder in Stewart’s death in July, about two weeks after Stewart’s body was discovered.
The court system has thus far treated Young as a juvenile. Prosecutors in the state want to charge Young, who was 17 at the time of Stewart’s death and is 18 now, as an adult. First, he needed to be deemed competent to stand trial, and a judge ruled this week that he is.
“The court finds that the defendant is competent to proceed based on the court’s finding that the juvenile has a rational, as well as a factual, understanding of the proceedings and a sufficient present ability to consult with legal counsel with a reasonable degree of rational understanding,” wrote Maine District Court Judge Eric J. Walker on Wednesday.
Young is due back in court on May 7. Police have said a medical examiner determined Stewart’s cause of death was strangulation and blunt force trauma.
Jeremy Pratt, an attorney for Young, declined to comment on Thursday. Prosecutors in the case also declined to comment Thursday.
Authorities have not publicly stated a possible motive in the case. Court documents about the case, which were briefly made public before being removed from the state’s courts website, contained little detail other than stating that Young “did intentionally or knowingly cause the death of another human being, namely Sunshine Stewart.”
Audio recordings by the Waldo County Sheriff’s Office that were obtained by news agencies earlier this year provided details about Young’s history of violent behavior and mental health challenges prior to Stewart’s death. The Portland Press Herald reported that Young had been waiting for behavioral health services from the state.
Stewart went missing at Crawford Pond, where she was paddleboarding, on July 2 and her body was found the next day. The pond is a popular summertime attraction for swimming, boating and fishing. Stewart lived about 21 miles (34 kilometers) from the pond in the Tenants Harbor neighborhood in St. George.
Stewart’s friends and family celebrated her life with a maritime service last August. The memorial included a procession of boats, some decked out with flowers, in Tenants Harbor.
On the boats were pictures of Stewart smiling and a large sign that read, “Shine On.” Over the years, Stewart worked as a fisherman, boat captain, biologist, carpenter and bartender, friends have said.
Brought to you by www.srnnews.com


