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The Spokesman-Review Newspaper
Spokane, Washington  Est. May 19, 1883

Young mother gets 15 years for road rage murder

A young mother sobbed and promised the family of the man she stabbed to death during a chaotic road rage confrontation two years ago that she would take it all back if she could. Instead, a judge sentenced her today to nearly 15 years in prison. Maggie M. Tyler, 28, stood before Superior Court Judge Kathleen O’Connor and read a letter she had prepared for her sentencing after being convicted by a jury in April of second-degree murder in connection with the July 6, 2009, slaying of Vitaly Shevchuk in Spokane. Tyler had argued at her trial that she simply was defending herself, but jurors rejected it. “If I could turn back time, I would do that in a heart beat,” Tyler said as she cried. “None of this should have happened and I am so very sorry that it did. “If I could spend 100 years in prison to bring Vitaly back, I would.” The fatal encounter began when Tyler joined Matthew M. Nedeau and a third person for a car ride that led them to a neighborhood at Fifth Avenue and Greene Street on July 6, 2009. As they drove by, Shevchuk yelled something that prompted Nedeau to stop the car. A fight ensued in which Nedeau stabbed Shevchuk in the chest, injuring but not killing him. When Nedeau, Tyler and the other passenger tried to drive away, Shevchuk threw a large rock in the back window of their car. Nedeau drove a short distance then returned to the scene and again confronted Shevchuk, who had grabbed a pipe and was joined by at least two other people. A second scuffle erupted, and Tyler entered the fray armed with a knife, fatally stabbing Sheychuk in the neck. Defense attorney Kari Reardon asked O’Connor to give Tyler an exceptional sentence downward because Reardon said she was acting in self defense. “The reality is that Mr. Shevchuk died,” the judge said. “Obviously, the jury did not believe it rose to the point of self defense.” Shevchuk’s mother, Lyudmila Shevchuk, said even after two years she waits for her missing 24-year-old son to come home. “I just wish that Maggie will find peace with God,” Shevchuk said, to which Tyler began sobbing. Tyler’s aunt, Ella Sunday, said Tyler has dealt with the loss of a family member to suicide and both grandparents who raised her to a fatal car collision. “We understand the pain,” Sunday said. “We love her and we will continue to pray for the Shevchuks.” O’Connor previously sentenced Nedeau to 21 years in prison. And today, she sentenced Tyler - who had prior adult felony convictions for drug possession and forgery - to a total of 178 months in prison. “This has been a difficult trial … and time for both families,” she said. “We are all still wondering why this had to happen. The situation spun out of control for no particular reason.”