Bonds, with his long dreadlocks hanging well past the shoulders of his bright orange jumpsuit, told Alcantara's mother and sister sitting in the front row that he was sorry for their loss, but he wasn't going to admit to something he did not do. A little more than a day into deliberations in early June, a jury returned guilty verdicts against Bonds on charges of first-degree robbery, conspiracy to commit second-degree robbery and felony murder. After they drove off, she testified she heard Tarver and Bonds splitting up the proceeds of the robbery that included cash, a cellphone, about six $20 bags of marijuana, a gold chain that had been around Alcantara's neck and Alcantara's leather jacket. The witness told the jury during trial that Bonds told her that he shot Alcantara during the robbery and as a result White said it was clear to him that Tarver set Alcantara up and Bonds shot him. [...] he deserved a harsher sentence then the 50 years that White gave Tarver, 25, following his jury trial in January 2013. White also said that because Bonds was convicted of an armed robbery as a juvenile and had an assault conviction, his past was "replete" with criminal acts.