A New Jersey teen, who sneaked into New York City's One World Trade Center and ascended to the top of the 104-story building to the antenna, pleaded guilty on Wednesday to a misdemeanor charge stemming from the incident, New York media reported, according to The Associated Press.
Justin Casquejo, 16, accepted a plea deal that will keep the misdemeanor BASE jumping charge from his record and grant him youthful offender status in exchange for 23 days of community service, NBC New York reported, the AP reported.
BASE jumping refers to parachuting from a cliff or a tall structure, as opposed to jumping from an airplane, according to the AP. Though he did not parachute himself, Casquejo faced a charge in connection with the activity, according to NBC New York.
Casquejo was carrying his camera when he crawled through a small hole in the construction fence encircling the World Trade Center site in lower Manhattan early one March morning, officials said at the time, the AP reported.
He then clambered up scaffolding to enter the building, took an elevator to the 88th floor and climbed the stairs to the tower's antenna, which rises 1,776 feet above the ground, according to the AP.
Police with the Port Authority of New York and New Jersey, the public agency that owns the building, arrested Casquejo inside the skyscraper about two hours after he first entered, the AP reported.
Casquejo was originally charged with two counts of trespassing, the Manhattan district attorney's office said at the time, according to the AP.
Just days after Casquejo was arrested in March, four men turned themselves in at a New York police station for organizing a parachute jump from the 104-story building, the AP reported.
In May, the men pleaded not guilty to charges of reckless endangerment, burglary and unauthorized jumping from a structure. They face maximum sentences of between five and 15 years in prison, according to the AP.
The Port Authority has spent millions of dollars on security measures for the skyscraper, which is due to open later this year and which replaces the World Trade Center's Twin Towers that were destroyed by al Qaeda hijackers on Sept. 11, 2001, the AP reported.