A North Manchester father has accepted a plea deal nearly a year after his 4-year-old son died from a self-inflicted gunshot wound, bringing partial closure to a tragedy that has reignited debates about gun safety in homes with children. The case reveals disturbing details about repeated warnings that went unheeded.
Guilty Plea Follows Months of Legal Proceedings
Nathan Stanley entered a guilty plea to neglect of a dependent resulting in death in a Fort Wayne courtroom, court records confirm. The plea agreement caps his potential prison time at 25 years, though the charge itself carries a maximum sentence of 40 years.
The final sentencing decision now rests with the presiding judge, who will weigh the circumstances of the May 30, 2025 incident that claimed the life of Stanley’s eldest son. His wife, Mikayla Stanley, faces separate charges and is scheduled for trial in July 2026.
Fatal Discovery by Family Caregiver
The tragic incident unfolded while a family member supervised the couple’s two young boys at their North Manchester residence. According to court documents, the caregiver was preparing to change the younger child’s diaper in the master bedroom when the 4-year-old made a chilling discovery.
“Oh, a flashlight,” the boy said moments before the gun discharged.
The child died at the scene from a gunshot wound to the torso. Authorities later ruled the death a homicide, a classification used when a death results from another person’s actions or negligence, regardless of intent.
The weapon involved was identified as a Canik 9mm handgun that Nathan Stanley had used for target shooting just five days earlier.
Pattern of Negligence Documented
Investigators uncovered a troubling history of unsafe gun storage practices in the Stanley household. When Nathan Stanley returned home after the shooting, he told police he believed he owned multiple firearms, including:
- Three handguns
- One shotgun
- Possibly one .22 rifle
All weapons were kept in the bedroom outside of any safe or secure storage, court documents reveal.
Nathan Stanley admitted to officers that he had taken several guns shooting less than a week before his son’s death and failed to properly secure them afterward. He acknowledged having a safety plan with the Department of Child Services specifically regarding firearm storage, raising questions about compliance and oversight.
Mikayla Stanley’s statements to investigators painted a picture of ongoing conflict over gun safety. She told police she was “always getting onto Nathan about locking his guns up” and would periodically move weapons she found left out around the house. She reported that her husband frequently left firearms on the kitchen counter and other accessible locations.
Her first question to officers at the scene reportedly was whether the incident involved her husband’s guns, adding that he was “always leaving them out.”
Legal Consequences and Remaining Trial
The plea deal represents a significant reduction from the maximum possible sentence Nathan Stanley faced. While neglect of a dependent resulting in death carries up to 40 years in prison under Indiana law, prosecutors agreed to recommend no more than 25 years as part of the negotiated agreement.
The agreement grants the judge discretion within that framework, allowing consideration of mitigating and aggravating factors during sentencing.
Mikayla Stanley remains charged with two counts of neglect of a dependent. Her trial is set to proceed in July 2026, where she will face separate accountability for her role in the circumstances that led to her son’s death.
Legal experts note that parents can face criminal liability when their failure to secure firearms enables children to access them, particularly when there is evidence of prior awareness of the danger.
As this family faces the consequences of choices that proved fatal, the case serves as a stark reminder of the irreversible cost of gun storage negligence. The sentencing hearing will determine how many years Nathan Stanley spends behind bars, but no judicial outcome can restore the young life lost to preventable tragedy.
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