Showing posts with label California. Show all posts
Showing posts with label California. Show all posts

Saturday, 25 June 2011

FILICIDE: California: Shemeeka Davis trial

 June 15, 2011
Jurors heard closing arguments Wednesday in the trial for an Antioch woman accused of torturing and abusing her two foster children for years and ultimately killing one of them in 2008.
On Sept. 2, 2008, Antioch police were called to the home of Shemeeka Davis, now 40, where they found 15-year-old Jazzmin Davis dead on the floor.
She had died about two hours earlier, but Davis did not call 911. Instead, she called her mother, who eventually called police, attorneys said.
At the time of her death, Jazzmin, who was 5 feet 7 inches tall, weighed only 78 pounds and had scars and injuries covering her entire body, prosecutor Satish Jallepalli said.
The coroner found that she died from a combination of physical abuse and malnutrition, Jallepalli said.
Jazzmin's twin brother was also severely malnourished and had extensive injuries, but he lived and was able to testify during trial to the abuse he and his sister suffered at the hands of Davis, who had cared for them since birth.
Davis has entered a dual plea of not guilty and not guilty by reason of insanity to one count of murder, two counts of torture and two counts of felony child abuse.
Because of the dual plea, if Davis is found guilty of any of the charges, there will be a second phase to the trial, during which jurors will be asked to decide whether Davis was legally sane at the time she allegedly committed the crimes.
Her attorney, Betty Barker, argued throughout the trial that Davis suffered from several severe mental illnesses, including psychotic delusions, and was therefore unable to form the intent to torture either of the children or to murder Jazzmin.
Jallepalli has agreed that Davis is mentally ill, but argued that her actions show that she was aware that the abuse she was inflicting on the children was wrong because she took steps to cover it up.
Beginning in 2002, Davis started skipping doctor's appointments for Jazzmin's brother, who needed treatment for sickle cell anemia.
It was around that time that Davis allegedly began beating the children with belts. The beatings continued to escalate over time and Davis allegedly began using electrical cords, a wooden closet rod, and a belt with a padlock attached to one end to beat the children. She also allegedly burned them with a hot iron, deprived them of food and kept them locked in their closet for long periods of time, Jallepalli said.
As the beatings escalated, Davis stopped taking Jazzmin's brother to the doctor altogether. In the year before Jazzmin's death, Davis stopped letting her go to school or even leave the house.
The summer before Jazzmin died, Davis applied for guardianship of the children, which was granted a week before Jazzmin's death. Guardianship meant no more visits from social workers, Jallepalli said.
"Hiding evidence, falsifying evidence -- and the children were the evidence -- are key signs of awareness and consciousness of guilt," Jallepalli said.
Despite her mental illnesses, Jallepalli said Davis "chose to lie. She chose to hide the kids. She chose to withhold necessary medical treatment. She chose not to feed them or to feed them less and she chose to cut them off from people who could help them," Jallepalli said.
He said her mental illnesses were no excuse for what she did and asked the jury to convict Davis of first-degree murder, torture and child abuse.
Barker, however, painted a different picture of what went on in Davis' house. She claimed that when Davis beat the children, she did so in order to teach them to behave.
In order for abuse to be legally considered torture, a person has to inflict pain or suffering on another person for the purpose of revenge, extortion, persuasion or any sadistic purpose.
Barker argued that Davis' delusions, caused by her mental illnesses, prevented her from forming the specific intent required to prove a charge of torture.
Similarly, Barker argued that Davis' mental illness prevented her from forming an intent to kill Jazzmin.
According to Barker, Davis' delusions caused her to believe that Jazzmin was evil and that she was a danger to her and her daughter, who was 7 years old when Jazzmin died.
She allegedly told a friend that she believed Jazzmin had put urine in the apple juice and Comet or Ajax in food.
She believed that the twins were escaping from their closet and urinating on the floor, cutting wires under the hood of the car, tampering with the fireplace and ruining Davis' things, Barker said.
She believed that while she and her daughter were sleeping, Jazzmin would escape from her room, go into Davis' room and cut their hair and put household cleaners in it.
"She truly believed that these things were happening," Barker said.
But "her intent, as deranged as it may be, was to make them behave," Barker said.
"Because she was mentally ill, she did not and could not form the specific intent" to torture the children or murder Jazzmin, Barker said.
Four months before Jazzmin's death, Davis stopped going to work. She allegedly spent most of her time inside her bedroom with the door bolted shut from the inside. In case that did not hold, she also had an ironing board barricading the door and a rope attached to the doorknob to tie it shut, Barker said.
Jazzmin and her brother, meanwhile, spent most of their time locked in their closet in their bedroom, but Davis allegedly believed they could escape and were putting feces and urine in her lotion, Barker said.
She changed the locks often, put baby powder on the floor so she could see their footprints, tied bells and ropes to the doorknobs and put a baby monitor outside the closet door, Barker said.
After Jazzmin died, Davis allegedly told Jazzmin's brother, "I just wanted you to stop," Barker said.
Barker conceded that Davis was guilty of child abuse, but asked the jury to find her not guilty of murder and torture.
The jury began deliberating in the case Wednesday afternoon in Contra Costa County Superior Court in Martinez and were expected to resume deliberations Thursday at 9 a.m.
http://www.ktvu.com/news/28251613/detail.html

Monday, 30 May 2011

FILICIDE (multiple attempted): California mother, Lyn Benedetto, tries to kill kids before the tribulation

05/22/2011 :  Kristal Roberts
PALMDALE, Calif. - A California woman who says she wanted to protect her children from the May 21 “tribulation” is in jail after slitting the throats of her daughters’ before cutting her own back in March, KTLA reports.
Lyn Benedetto, 47, told authorities that to prevent her family from suffering, she had her daughters, 11 and 14, lie on a bed, took a box cutter knife to their throats, then cut herself March 19.
The suspect reportedly drove the victims to a friend’s home that she thought was empty, planning to die there.

Lancaster deputies say they responded to call regarding an assault with a knife around 5:30 p.m. from the owner of that home.
The mother was found at the location and arrested. The two victims were taken to Antelope Valley Hospital for “moderate though non life threatening injuries” and released to custody of Department of Children’s Services.
Benedetto is being held on a $1 million bail.
http://www.abcactionnews.com/dpp/news/national/california-mother,-lyn-benedetto,-tries-to-kill-kids-before-the-tribulation,-deputies-say

Saturday, 21 May 2011

INFANTICIDE (attempted): California: Danielle Mailloux charged with attempted murder after infant stabbed

May 16 2011
 
A Bakersfield mother is under arrest on charges she tried to kill her own baby.
Police were called to a house on Crawford Street in east Bakersfield Sunday evening. When they arrived, they found a six-week-old girl with multiple stab wounds on her upper body.
The baby's mother, 24-year-old Danielle Mailloux, was arrested and is due in court Tuesday on charges of attempted murder.
"Shocking and disturbing," said one neighbor.
"We don't have a motive at this point," said Ray Pruitt, Kern County Sheriff's Department. "The case is still under investigation."
Authorities believe Mailloux stabbed the infant multiple times with a kitchen knife.
"The stab wounds were primarily to the upper body," said Pruitt.
The Sheriff's Department wouldn't release the name of the child, but said she is in stable condition at Children's Hospital in Madera.
Investigators say there were other children at the house who are now staying with relatives.
It's not the first time Mailloux has been investigated for crimes against children. Two years ago, she delivered a full-term baby that was stillborn. Tests showed the child died as a result of Mailloux's methamphetamine use and the coroner ruled the death a homicide.
Under California law, however, the mother of a fetus cannot be charged with murder if they solicited, aided, abetted, or consented the act that killed the unborn child.
Neighbors we talked to didn't know much about the couple, other than they often saw them hanging out in their front lawn.
"Always having nothing to do," said Robert Herrera. "I was always up and down coming from work and I would see them outside. Early in the morning, late at night, they would be outside."
"I'm shocked. I'm really shocked," said Cynthia Mancha. "I guess in this neighborhood it shouldn't faze me, but for a mother to do that I am really surprised."
http://www.kget.com/news/local/story/Mom-accused-of-stabbing-infant-daughter/oIxosE5_pEqy__k0sBq8-A.cspx
 

Monday, 2 May 2011

FILICIDE: California: Anul Malik Ram pleads insanity - prosecution's compromise

Andy Furillo: Apr. 30, 2011
6M30MOTHER.JPG Anul Malik Ram admits drowning her daughter, 3, but made an insanity plea in her son's attempted murder.
 
With psychiatric medications already in her system, Anul Malik Ram came home from work one night and drank a 24-ounce bottle of Corona and smoked two packs of cigarettes in four hours, according to testimony at her preliminary hearing.Then, authorities said, she went over to her estranged husband's house, picked up their two kids, took them home – and drowned her 3-year-old daughter in the bathtub.
The 32-year-old licensed vocational nurse admitted the second-degree murder Friday in Sacramento Superior Court. Ram is scheduled to be sentenced to prison for 15 years to life when she returns to face Judge Marjorie Koller on May 20. Deputy District Attorney Charles Gonzalez said the plea deal came at the request of Assistant Public Defender Jeff Barbour. The prosecutor characterized the agreement as a "dual plea" – of guilt to the murder charge while at the same time she contends she is not guilty by reason of insanity to the attempted murder of her then-7-year-old son.
If Ram had been found not guilty by reason of insanity to the murder, she would have been sent to a state mental hospital for an indefinite term. If hospital officials later decided she had been restored to sanity, she could have been released to community placement well before the 15-year minimum she now faces."This was a compromise," Gonzalez said. "She gets to go to the hospital, but if she ever regains her sanity, she goes to prison. They gain the benefit of knowing she's going to the hospital, and we gain the benefit of knowing she'll get at least 15 years."If she would have been found not guilty by reason of insanity, she could have been released in a year."Barbour did not return a phone call for comment.Ram pleaded guilty to the single count of second-degree murder in the Nov. 15, 2009, drowning death of her daughter, Divya Ram. She also was charged with trying to murder her son, Devan, in her apartment in the 7300 block of Greenhaven Drive.According to testimony at her Oct. 1, 2010, preliminary hearing, Ram told detectives she was bipolar and depressed. The detectives testified she had been taking Lamictal for her seizures, Abilify for her depression and schizophrenia, and Lexapro for depression and anxiety. A DA's office news release said Ram once tried to kill herself and had spent some time in a mental hospital for psychiatric treatment. At her preliminary hearing, Sacramento Police Detective Jason Kirtlan said Ram "was aware there were precautions on the medications not to drink" while taking them.But on the fatal Saturday night she came home from work to an empty apartment, "she was depressed and hearing voices," Kirtlan testified. They told her "that her children weren't meant for her, that she was meant to be alone," the detective said.Ram then went to the residence of her husband, Dinesh, retrieved the two children around 1:30 a.m. and brought them to her apartment."She was hearing voices and decided to give her daughter a bath," Kirtlan testified. She then "held her underwater for five minutes until she was lifeless," the detective said.Ram also told police she sexually abused the girl before she killed her, according to Kirtlan's testimony.Kirtlan said Ram told him in his interview the day of the killing "she was remorseful and would suffer all consequences for her action."Another detective at the preliminary hearing testified that Devan Ram witnessed the drowning death of his sister.The boy watched as "his mother put her underneath the water," Detective Ashley Englefield testified.Devan told police "that she breathed the water," Englefield said. "Those were his words. … Then he said she couldn't breathe and then she died.""He told me his mother told him that he would find his sister again in another time," Englefield said. 

Sunday, 30 January 2011

FILICIDE: California: Crystal Lewis

Jan. 26, 2011: 

The Madera County woman suspected of killing her 5-year-old daughter this week before jumping to her death from a bridge had fought in court to win custody of the girl in 2008, court records show.
But before siding with Crystal Lewis in her bitter custody battle with her ex-boyfriend, a judge ordered her to get counseling because she had used drugs, according to documents in the child custody case in Madera County Superior Court.
The records paint a picture of a family life plagued with violence and drugs. But authorities are still trying to determine why Lewis apparently slashed her daughter's throat.
Autopsies have been completed on Lewis, 23, and her daughter, Marijane Lyn Lewis, but Madera County sheriff's officials are no closer to understanding the motive.
Sheriff's spokeswoman Erica Stuart said toxicology tests on Crystal Lewis' body have been taken, and the results will be available in about three weeks.
"I was in fear for the safety of my daughter and myself," Lewis said.
She detailed a fight in July 2006 when, she said, Gutierrez pushed her to the ground and held her down after threatening to kill her and take away her daughter.
But in his own statement, Gutierrez said Lewis had started that fight. She came to his Coarsegold home and accused him of cheating on her, he said.
"She kept asking why I didn't love her," Gutierrez said in his sworn statement. "Crystal began saying that she was going crazy and she wasn't a good mother and that she can't take care of Marijane."
"She wanted to kill herself and be put away in a mental institution," he said.
Gutierrez said Lewis was upset because a female friend of his was at the house. Lewis threatened to slit the woman's throat and kill her, Gutierrez said.
The friend, Sarah Manning, also gave a sworn statement about the incident, saying Lewis was the aggressor. Lewis kicked, hit and scratched Gutierrez, Manning said.
In September 2006, Lewis told a judge that she had stopped taking drugs. She accused Gutierrez of continuing to use drugs, and she asked the judge for primary custody of their daughter.
The judge ordered Lewis to attend counseling.
On Nov. 14, 2007, Lewis submitted proof to the court that she had attended six sessions with a clinical psychologist.
The judge later gave Lewis primary custody and in April 2008 ordered Gutierrez to make monthly child-support payments of $183.

 http://www.fresnobee.com/2011/01/26/2248625/court-records-detail-family-strife.html#ixzz1CWL84QXc