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Inset: Derek Lewis (Blue Ridge Regional Jail – Lynchburg). Background: The restaurant where Lewis shot and killed another man in Lynchburg, Va. (Google Maps).
A Virginia courtroom witnessed the culmination of a tragic incident this week, as a judge sentenced Derek Lewis to a significant prison term for the fatal shooting of Tyler Johnson. The decision marks the end of a legal process that began with Lewis’s conviction earlier this year.
In February 2025, a jury found Lewis, 31, guilty of several serious charges, including second-degree murder, use of a firearm in the commission of a felony, shooting in the commission of a felony, and maliciously discharging a firearm in an occupied dwelling. These charges stemmed from a violent encounter in November 2022 that led to the death of the 28-year-old victim, Tyler Johnson.
The altercation occurred at the Iron & Ale restaurant on Cornerstone Street in Lynchburg, Virginia. On that fateful night, Lewis, believing that Johnson and his mother were mocking him, responded with fatal gunfire. This incident, as reported by The News & Advance, escalated quickly, ending in tragedy.
Circuit Court Judge F. Patrick Yeatts handed down a 63-year prison sentence to Lewis, with eight years suspended, resulting in 55 years of incarceration. This decision reflects the severity of the crime and the loss of life involved. “The bottom line here is Tyler Johnson is dead, and he absolutely should not be,” Lynchburg Assistant Commonwealth’s Attorney Dianna Baker emphasized to the jurors, underscoring the conscious nature of Lewis’s actions.
The defense presented a different narrative, suggesting that Johnson’s aggressive approach towards Lewis, described as “coming in hot,” was a factor that diminished any malice in Lewis’s actions. They argued that Lewis was retreating when the shot was fired, suggesting a lack of intent to kill.
The defense, for their part, argued there was no malice behind the shooting because Johnson was aggressive and “coming in hot” toward Lewis, who was backing up at the time the gun was fired.
The confrontation between the two men began after Lewis erased part of a specials chalkboard, Lewis himself testified, according to a courtroom report by Lynchburg-based ABC affiliate WSET.
Describing the incident as self-defense, the since-condemned man said Johnson angrily approached him and told him not to touch things that were not his – and then followed him into the bathroom to lodge a threat. After that, the defendant testified, he walked over to Johnson and his mother to apologize before the woman said to let it go. As Lewis walked away, however, he said he heard laughter and mocking, so he offered a middle finger response. Then, things escalated, Lewis said.
“Oh, hell no,” Johnson allegedly said. “Do you have a problem?”
Lewis said he answered in the negative but the victim, apparently adamant on a contretemps, replied: “Well, you do now.”
The killer said the victim began “closing in” and threatened: “Let’s take this outside. I’ll stab your b– a–.” Then, Lewis said, Johnson shoved him into a wall, held him “in his grip” and left a bruise on his arm. After that, the bullet came – traveling through Johnson’s heart and ending in his spine.
As it turned out, Johnson was the restaurant owner’s son. Lewis said he did not know that at the time of the incident.
In the end, the jury agreed with the state.
After the shooting, Lewis left the restaurant and ran to his mother’s house some two miles away. Then, he drove to Baltimore/Washington International Thurgood Marshall Airport in Maryland and bought a plane ticket bound for Cancun, Mexico. He boarded his flight and was arrested in Jacksonville, Florida, during a layover.
“This was so avoidable,” Yeatts said during the sentencing hearing, according to a courtroom report by The News & Advance. “I wish Mr. Johnson had never approached you.”