Joshua Purcell kept a written list of goals: “I will get close to God, I will read my Bible, I will remember to take out the trash and I will put my best foot forward in all the sports I play.”

But the 16-year-old never got the chance to see these things through.

On July 15, 2020, Josh lost his life to four bullets in the parking lot of Bethel AME Church, his cell phone lying next to him streaming video of a gray sky after falling out of his hand.

Danquies Anderson, the young man responsible for Josh’s death, also lost life as he once knew it β€” making this one of Tallahassee’s gut-wrenching examples of the extreme consequences of the tragic combination of teens and guns.

Danquies Anderson sits as the state presents its case, Nov. 30, 2023.

“This is the fact pattern that is haunting our community,” State Attorney Jack Campbell said. “This is an absolute nightmare.”

Anderson, who was 18 when he pulled the trigger, sat in a Leon County courtroom Thursday afternoon where he waived his right to a jury trial and let Circuit Judge Stephen Everett decide his fate.

The now 21-year-old was sentenced to 15 years in prison and 10 years of probation for second-degree murder and possession of a firearm by a delinquent.

Those closest to Joshua Purcell, 16, mourn his untimely death in a shooting Wednesday night.

“A case like this one presents a unique difficulty for a court system,” Everett said to Anderson. “You are old enough to be deemed an adult because you were 18 at the time of your offense, but you’re also young enough to not really fully appreciate how your actions impacted the lives of others or the fact that you could’ve ended up in prison for the rest of your life.”





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