14-year-old arrested for DeBary shooting

Jeff Jones

DeBary, FL – A 14-year-old has been arrested in a shooting Thursday that injured a man who was trying to buy some marijuana at a house in DeBary.

The shooter, Juan Calle Pallasco (DOB 1/1/2007), is charged with attempted murder with a firearm, unlawful possession of a firearm by a juvenile (2nd offense) and violation of juvenile probation he received for his previous firearm possession charge in February.

The shooting was reported around noon Thursday, when the 20-year-old male victim told deputies he was shot outside 22 Estrella Road in DeBary after he attempted to purchase marijuana there from a known contact named Juan.


The victim had a non-life-threatening gunshot wound to his right calf. He described a silver Chevrolet Silverado that the suspect who shot him was riding in. About 20 minutes after the initial 911 call, deputies spotted the Silverado on Highbanks Road in DeBary and stopped it, detaining the 14-year-old suspect along with two other male occupants the victim had described.

Pallasco was not cooperative during the initial investigation and denied shooting the victim.

A search warrant at 22 Estrella resulted in the recovery of a drum magazine and several rounds of ammunition, along with some marijuana plants. A spent 9mm shell casing was found on the front porch where the victim said Pallasco was standing when he shot him.

Pallasco was taken into custody and transported to the Department of Juvenile Justice, where he was being held in secure custody. His prior charges as a juvenile include battery, criminal mischief, unlawful possession of a firearm by a juvenile, child neglect, operating a vehicle without a license and violation of probation.

Pallasco’s firearm charge in February stemmed from an Instagram video in which he and two other juveniles showed off multiple firearms in a message over tensions with other students at River Springs Middle School in Orange City. The charge of unlawful possession of a firearm by a juvenile is a misdemeanor, and a DJJ assessment determined his risk to reoffend was moderate. DJJ recommended a judge place him on probation, with a curfew and an assigned 250-word essay on “The Importance of Abiding By The Law.”

“Our broken juvenile justice system that assigns lame essays and gives pats on the head is failing our community,” Sheriff Mike Chitwood said Friday. “It’s time juveniles who want to act like adult criminals face real consequences for their actions.”

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