A group of teenage girls who Tasered a pizza delivery man at a Gresham apartment complex last September and then made off with his pizzas have all been sentenced to three years of probation.

The four teens -- ages 17 and 18 -- were caught later that night after a police dog tracked them to a house on the same block around 2 a.m. Sept. 30. Police saw them eating pizza through a window of the home.

The teens didn't cooperate under questioning, but one of the them admitted, "We took the pizza. When you're hungry, you're hungry," according to a probable-cause affidavit.

Pizza Hut delivery man Polin Chhay told police that he arrived at an apartment complex near Northeast 170th Place and Halsey Street and was headed toward an apartment when he saw the group.

One of the teens told him that he was going to the wrong apartment and that's when he was shocked with the Taser. He told police he felt a jolt of pain and the teen fired the Taser again.

All four were charged in the adult system with second-degree robbery -- a crime that requires a nearly six-year prison sentence upon conviction.

The oldest of the defendants -- Khamrie Symone Allen-Fuller, 18 -- pleaded guilty in May to the lesser crime of third-degree robbery and was sentenced in Multnomah County Circuit Court to probation and 80 hours of community service. She also must write a letter of apology to the delivery man and cut off all contact with the other three defendants.

The three other teens -- who were 17 at the time of the robbery -- all received sentences similar to that of Allen-Fuller, with the exception of the community service. Two of them received no community service, while another received 24 hours.

They originally were charged as adults, but ultimately were prosecuted in juvenile court for the equivalent of third-degree robbery.

Court records paint a varied picture of their lives.

Allen-Fuller and one of the 17-year-olds had no criminal history and were on track to graduate from high school or already had. Allen-Fuller held down a job at the clothing store Forever 21, but she lost the job because of her arrest, according to court documents.

The other two 17-year-olds have both struggled in school. One of them -- the teen who fired the Taser -- told authorities that she was three months pregnant at the time, used marijuana weekly and experienced a drop in her grade-point average recently from a 3.0 to a 2.0.

Investigators say the other 17-year-old also had a problem with marijuana -- serious enough that her high school principal noted that she showed up to school in March reeking of pot, according to court documents. She has attended three different high schools in as many years, according to court records.

A deputy who interviewed her mother wrote in a court report that the mother-daughter relationship was filled with conflict, and her mother thought the girl might benefit from attending an out-of-town "boot camp."

Supervision Deputy Kari Kolberg also wrote that the teen was sad that her arrest meant she had to spend Christmas 2016 in jail.

"Her family hopes these charges and recent incarceration have 'scared her straight,'" Kolberg wrote.

-- Aimee Green