The boy never hesitated.
In a small Illinois home, an 8-year-old stepped between his mother and a man twice her size, knowing exactly how much danger he was in.
Neighbors heard the screams, sirens tore through the quiet streets, and a town’s heart was shattered in a single, brutal night.
Now, as his mother fights for her life and his alleged killer prepares for trial, one question haunts everyone who loved him most: how could a child be forced to be this brave, in a world this cru…
They remember him first by his smile. Leland “Lee” Arnett was the kind of child who ran into hugs at full speed, who made adults
feel safer just by being near him. His family describes him as a protector, a boy whose instinct was always to shield, to comfort, to stand between others and harm.
That instinct cost him his life on May 13, when, according to authorities, he stepped in to defend his mother during a violent attack inside their
De Soto, Illinois, home.
His mother, Deborah, is still in a hospital bed, fighting to heal from injuries that nearly killed her. Loved ones are struggling
with impossible logistics: funeral costs, medical transport to Nebraska, the care of siblings whose world has been ripped apart. Yet through their grief, they speak of
Lee not as a victim, but as a hero whose final act was an expression of pure, unwavering love.