Woman who shot boyfriend dead in YouTube stunt jailed 6 months

"Me and Pedro are probably going to shoot one of the most dangerous videos ever-HIS idea not MINE."


Afp March 15, 2018
This file booking photo courtesy of Norman County Sheriff's office obtained on June 29, 2017 shows 19-year-old Minnesota woman Monalisa Perez. A 19-year-old Minnesota woman, charged with manslaughter for fatally shooting her boyfriend in the chest, in a stunt for a YouTube video, was sentenced to 6 months in prision an March 14, 2018. The shooting on June 26, 2017 was part of aspiring YouTube star Pedro Ruiz's efforts to build an online following by performing dangerous stunts, according to police and media reports. The couple's YouTube channel called "La MonaLisa" has videos dating back one month, in which the couple published accounts of their daily lives. The 22-year-old man convinced his girlfriend Monalisa Perez, who is charged with second-degree manslaughter, to shoot him with a powerful gun from about a foot away, while he held a book in front of his chest, police said in court documents. PHOTO:AFP

CHICAGO: A judge in the US state of Minnesota sentenced a YouTube prankster to six months in prison on Wednesday for fatally shooting her boyfriend in a botched video stunt they hoped would go viral.

Monalisa Perez, a 20-year-old mother of two children, believed her boyfriend Pedro Ruiz would be shielded by a thick book as she shot him at close range last June in front of onlookers. 22-year-old Ruiz, died at the scene.

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Perez accepted an agreement with prosecutors in December and pleaded guilty to second-degree manslaughter.

Judge Jeffrey Remick followed the plea agreement recommendations in his sentencing, and allowed Perez to serve her prison time in 10-day increments over three years.

She is eligible to serve the final three months of her sentence in home confinement and is subject to 10 years of supervised probation.

Perez and Ruiz were recording the stunt for their YouTube channel which published videos of their daily lives and pranks.

Ruiz convinced Perez to shoot him from a foot away with a powerful Desert Eagle .50-caliber pistol while he held a 1.5-inch (3.8 centimeters) thick book in front of his chest.

The young man, who had hoped for internet fame, presented Perez with another book with a bullet hole on one side and no exit hole, as proof his plan would work, police said.

"Me and Pedro are probably going to shoot one of the most dangerous videos ever," Perez wrote on Twitter prior to performing the stunt. "HIS idea not MINE."

With their video cameras recording and alarmed onlookers watching, Perez, who was pregnant with the couple's second child, pulled the trigger.

The bullet pierced the book and fatally wounded Ruiz. He died of a single gunshot wound to the chest.

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Family and friends said at the time that Ruiz had been talking about performing the stunt for some time.

"I said, 'Don't do it, don't do it,'" Claudia Ruiz, the young man's aunt, told local TV station KVLY at the time.
She said the man's response was, "We want more viewers."

The couple's YouTube channel is still active and its videos have accumulated 5.3 million views.

As part of her plea deal, Perez agreed to not seek financial gain from her case and was banned from owning firearms.

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