Brittany Covington, 19, was sentenced to four years probation on Friday in Chicago

A teen who narrated a shocking video of a disabled man being tortured and abused has been sentenced to probation.

Brittany Covington, 19, was sentenced to four years probation on Friday in Chicago, after pleading guilty to a hate crime, in a case that received national attention earlier this year.

The incident, broadcast live on Facebook, involved a white victim and four black people who taunted him with profanities against white people and now-President Donald Trump.

Covington had been held in jail without bond since January, when the video surfaced.

Her three co-defendants are her sister Tanishia Covington, 24, Jordan Hill, 18, and Tesfaye Cooper, 18. They remain in custody and their cases are pending.

Charged (left to right): Tanishia Covington, 24, Jordan Hill, 18, and Tesfaye Cooper, 18, remain in custody in the case and plea negotiations are ongoing

Prosecutors say the saga first unfolded this past New Year's Eve, when Hill picked up the victim, who has a chronic mental disorder, in a stolen van at a suburban Chicago McDonald's, the Sun-Times reported.

The pair had been classmates at an alternative high school in the west suburbs of the city, and drove around in the stolen van for three days visiting friends, police said.

During that time, the victim slept in the stolen van, cops said, until they ended up at the Covington sisters' apartment on the West Side of Chicago.

Shocking video of the incident shows the victim being hit and racially taunted

There, a 'play fight' between Hill and the victim escalated and the victim was bullied into a corner by the defendants, according to police.

Hill and Cooper allegedly cut his clothing with a knife, hit him and forced him to drink toilet water.

On the video of the attack, the suspects are seen beating the victim and can be heard taunting him and shouting profanities.

'F**k Trump!' and 'F**k white people!' can be heard in the background of the video.

At one point, someone demanded that the victim kiss the floor, and told him to 'say "I love black people".'

Prosecutors say that Hill called the victim's mother and asked for $300 in ransom for his return.

The victim eventually escaped and a police officer spotted him wandering down a street, bloodied and disoriented.

In Brittany Covington's plea deal, prosecutors dropped a kidnapping charge and others in exchange for her pleading guilty to committing a hate crime, aggravated battery and intimidation.

The judge ordered her to not use social media for four years. She also must perform 200 hours of community service.

The other three suspects remain in custody and plea negotiations with them are ongoing.