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A 15-year-old accused in multiple violent holdups across Milwaukee may be back on the streets in 60 days.Gary Watson was walking home from the gas station last March when a van full of kids pulled up.VIDEO: Chief angry over teen's light sentence"He looked right over at me and said, 'What you got in your pockets?'" Watson said. "They literally were trying to run me over, so I started running."Watson said he ran for blocks, jumping fences and hiding."I'd act like I was running through the yard, but then I stopped and laid down," Watson said.But they were always behind him."Two of them had me cornered in like this. I did a stutter stop like I was fitting to fight with both of them and ran right through them," he said.Finally Watson said he could run no more."All I could do was stop. They kept saying, 'Shoot him bro, shoot him bro, pop him,'" Watson said.He gave them his phones, his cash, his credit cards and his car keys. They ran off.A couple hours later, police got a call about a suspicious van in an alley. They blocked it in with their squad cars.When officers ordered the sleeping passengers to get out, police said the driver hit the gas, hitting one officer and ramming a squad car in an effort to get awayPolice arrested six kids in the alley. They said the 15-year-old driver had Watson's phone on him. Officers found Watson's car keys in the van.Prosecutors at children's court charged the 15-year-old with several felonies. They argued he should go to a prison and even tried to move the case to adult court noting he belonged to a dangerous robbery crew responsible for a citywide surge in car heists and armed robberies.Several judges oversaw the case, and on Monday, one sentenced the teen to a probationary program at St. Charles Youth and Family Services, which with good behavior, means he could get leave passes within 60-90 days."When I heard the sentence, the top of my head started to come off," Milwaukee Police Chief Ed Flynn said.Flynn called the teen a poster child for the spike in youth crime. He said the sentence fails to discourage others kids."If those immature minds do not receive a strong message that their antisocial conduct is dangerous and disapproved of, why should we be surprised they don't learn a lesson and go right back out and do the same thing?" Flynn said.More importantly, Flynn said, the sentence fails to adequately address the danger the teen poses to the community."We in the community have to live with the consequences. The judges have to understand that," Flynn said."There is not a one-size-fits-all answer to that question," Milwaukee County Circuit Court Judge Jeffery Kremers said. "What we know from the research is if you put a low or medium or moderate risk individual with a high risk individual it's a one-way street. The lower-moderate risk individual learns how to be a more dangerous person. The more dangerous person doesn't learn how to be less dangerous from that low-risk or moderate person."These dudes could be out here seeking revenge to come back," Watson said.Watson can't believe the judge sent the 15-year-old to St. Charles instead of a prison."What if it was one of they kids that the situation happened to? Would they want the violators to still have that sense of freedom like that? Cause that's no punishment at all," Watson said.So Watson has taken matters into his own hands. He got a concealed carry permit and a gun. He said if the kids who attacked him come back, he'll be ready.