A Rochester man is going to prison for two to four years for his part in a baseball-bat attack on three State Street residents on May 20.
Reginald Charles Sampson, 44, of 335 Flanders St., Rochester, entered a guilty plea to burglary, 3rd, and menacing, 2nd, charge July 21. He was originally charged with burglary, 2nd.
Attorney Fred Rarick told Judge Robert C. Noonan that Sampson was a candidate for a supervised probation release that would include substance abuse counseling, but Noonan said Sampson was already getting a good deal with the reduction in the burglary charge.
Sampson told Noonan, "I wish I could do everything different."
Sampson was part of a group of five individuals who busted into an apartment at 112 State St., Batavia, on May 20, swinging baseball bats. One person suffered serious, but not life-threatening, injuries.
Batavia Police say no further arrests have been made, but the case is not closed.
A victim's statement included in Sampson's court file describes the May 20 attack.
The woman was sitting in her apartment with two men when they heard a commotion downstairs. Soon, somebody was banging at their front door. When one of her male companions opened the door, he was immediately hit by an individual swinging some object.
She described the attackers as five black males.
She recognized Sampson as someone who had punched her the night before.
"I know Reginald had a bat for sure," she said. "Reginald came over to me. I was laying on the couch. He was pointing his bat at me and he said, 'I told you, Shorty, we don't play.'"
When the other male got up and tried to leave, saying "I wasn't part of this," all five individuals started hitting him, according to the witness. She said one person picked up her crutch and hit him with it.
Sampson told Noonan, "I wish
Sampson told Noonan, "I wish I could do everything different."
Translation, "I wish I hadn't been caught."