Tuesday, July 8, 2014
Convicted custodial dad killer avoids death penaly thanks to stepmom's testimony (Honolulu, Hawaii)
So basically because the step was also a nasty piece of business, custodial dad and convicted killer NAEEM WILLIAMS is spared his life.
Notice how the media is now slicking over the process by which this POS was granted custody. There is a lot of back story that is not being told. Here is some of it from a previous 2005 article posted here:
Tarshia Williams [Talia's mother] said she is devastated, sad and angry over the death of her daughter, whom she last saw in December [2004]. "She was doing great, she was happy, she was joyful -- she was just being a little girl."
Although the girl's father was awarded custody that month, the plan approved by the courts said her daughter was to stay with her mother in South Carolina every summer beginning July 1.
But when July came around, the girl's father still hadn't sent the girl home.
"They had her bruised up, so they didn't send her," Williams said, citing reports of the girl's abuse. "I just can't believe they did all of that."
If they didn't want her daughter, they could have sent her back, she said. "I would have been glad to take her back."
The courts had placed the girl in her father's custody in part because she exhibited developmental delays and a failure to thrive while with her mother. Glenn Walters, Williams' attorney, said the girl didn't have a healthy appetite and her body didn't absorb nutrients effectively. But her condition continued even while with her father, Walters said.
Tarshia Williams said a court order was in also place allowing her to phone her daughter twice a week on Mondays and Thursdays. But those calls eventually stopped. She filed papers in court to regain her court-ordered rights, but the matter is still pending.
See here for our previous coverage of this case.
http://thetandd.com/news/jurors-stepmom-s-role-helped-soldier-avoid-death-in-tot/article_183a7872-064a-11e4-bfea-0019bb2963f4.html
Jurors: Stepmom’s role helped soldier avoid death in tot’s slaying
2 hours ago • By JENNIFER SINCO KELLEHER, Associated Press
HONOLULU — Delilah Williams testified at her husband’s murder trial that she had stomped on her 5-year-old stepdaughter so hard that she heard bone crack.
She said she and her former soldier husband abused the girl regularly while they lived in Army housing in Hawaii, beating her with belts and withholding food for days.
Because of her testimony and a binding plea agreement, Williams will be sentenced to 20 years in prison, including nine years already served, in federal court in Honolulu on Tuesday, a prosecutor and her defense attorney said.
And her acknowledged role in the abuse helped keep her husband Naeem Williams from receiving the death penalty after he was convicted of murder. He is scheduled to be sentenced in October.
Jurors interviewed after the panel was unable to agree on a sentence in his trial said some of them partly blamed Delilah Williams for the death of Talia Williams. “She’s an evil person,” juror Clarence Kaona Jr. said. “It was because of her.”
Talia Williams was originally from Orangeburg, but was sent to live with her father after a family court hearing in December 2004.
Federal public defender Alexander Silvert, who represents Delilah Williams, had expected her guilty plea to a murder charge to have a major impact on the jury hearing the case against her husband. During the penalty phase of his trial, eight jurors wanted him executed; four sought life in prison.
“All along we thought that the deal the government struck with Delilah would be a very big factor for any juror in imposing the death penalty for Naeem,” Silvert said.
Some of the jurors planned to attend her sentencing.
“Hopefully that will give me some closure,” juror Kelle Mata said about traveling to the Honolulu courtroom from his home on Kauai to honor the young victim.
Jurors said they considered many different factors in reaching their individual decisions.
In the end, jurors agreed the decision before them involved Naeem Williams, not his wife, Mata said. “The bottom line came down to she didn’t do the last blow,” he said.
Prosecutors say Naeem Williams delivered a deadly punch on July 16, 2005, that left knuckle imprints on Talia’s chest. He testified that he beat her that day in part because she spit toothpaste all over the sink.
“I went for death,” Mata said, noting that he had considered testimony about childhood abuse of the defendant. “Though it was a hard decision because I understand his past of him being abused and him having a psycho wife ... had that influence.”
Fellow juror Betty Jane Auten said she considered the influence of Delilah Williams on her husband, “but Naeem could have stopped Delilah at any time from hurting his child.”
Some jurors said her plea deal was unfair.
“I just felt that was a done deal, we can’t change that,” Auten said. “We need to be focusing on his actions and what he did and didn’t do to protect his daughter.”
When jurors were finally able to discuss the case with each other, they unloaded their feelings about the horrible things done to the child.
“People were crying, screaming, just getting out all the emotion that we had to keep in for so long,” Mata said.
When Delilah Williams, 30, completes the remainder of her sentence, she’ll be about 40.
“Given her conduct (at the Honolulu Federal Detention Center), she’s probably not going to get a lot of good behavior credit,” Silvert said.
Notice how the media is now slicking over the process by which this POS was granted custody. There is a lot of back story that is not being told. Here is some of it from a previous 2005 article posted here:
Tarshia Williams [Talia's mother] said she is devastated, sad and angry over the death of her daughter, whom she last saw in December [2004]. "She was doing great, she was happy, she was joyful -- she was just being a little girl."
Although the girl's father was awarded custody that month, the plan approved by the courts said her daughter was to stay with her mother in South Carolina every summer beginning July 1.
But when July came around, the girl's father still hadn't sent the girl home.
"They had her bruised up, so they didn't send her," Williams said, citing reports of the girl's abuse. "I just can't believe they did all of that."
If they didn't want her daughter, they could have sent her back, she said. "I would have been glad to take her back."
The courts had placed the girl in her father's custody in part because she exhibited developmental delays and a failure to thrive while with her mother. Glenn Walters, Williams' attorney, said the girl didn't have a healthy appetite and her body didn't absorb nutrients effectively. But her condition continued even while with her father, Walters said.
Tarshia Williams said a court order was in also place allowing her to phone her daughter twice a week on Mondays and Thursdays. But those calls eventually stopped. She filed papers in court to regain her court-ordered rights, but the matter is still pending.
See here for our previous coverage of this case.
http://thetandd.com/news/jurors-stepmom-s-role-helped-soldier-avoid-death-in-tot/article_183a7872-064a-11e4-bfea-0019bb2963f4.html
Jurors: Stepmom’s role helped soldier avoid death in tot’s slaying
2 hours ago • By JENNIFER SINCO KELLEHER, Associated Press
HONOLULU — Delilah Williams testified at her husband’s murder trial that she had stomped on her 5-year-old stepdaughter so hard that she heard bone crack.
She said she and her former soldier husband abused the girl regularly while they lived in Army housing in Hawaii, beating her with belts and withholding food for days.
Because of her testimony and a binding plea agreement, Williams will be sentenced to 20 years in prison, including nine years already served, in federal court in Honolulu on Tuesday, a prosecutor and her defense attorney said.
And her acknowledged role in the abuse helped keep her husband Naeem Williams from receiving the death penalty after he was convicted of murder. He is scheduled to be sentenced in October.
Jurors interviewed after the panel was unable to agree on a sentence in his trial said some of them partly blamed Delilah Williams for the death of Talia Williams. “She’s an evil person,” juror Clarence Kaona Jr. said. “It was because of her.”
Talia Williams was originally from Orangeburg, but was sent to live with her father after a family court hearing in December 2004.
Federal public defender Alexander Silvert, who represents Delilah Williams, had expected her guilty plea to a murder charge to have a major impact on the jury hearing the case against her husband. During the penalty phase of his trial, eight jurors wanted him executed; four sought life in prison.
“All along we thought that the deal the government struck with Delilah would be a very big factor for any juror in imposing the death penalty for Naeem,” Silvert said.
Some of the jurors planned to attend her sentencing.
“Hopefully that will give me some closure,” juror Kelle Mata said about traveling to the Honolulu courtroom from his home on Kauai to honor the young victim.
Jurors said they considered many different factors in reaching their individual decisions.
In the end, jurors agreed the decision before them involved Naeem Williams, not his wife, Mata said. “The bottom line came down to she didn’t do the last blow,” he said.
Prosecutors say Naeem Williams delivered a deadly punch on July 16, 2005, that left knuckle imprints on Talia’s chest. He testified that he beat her that day in part because she spit toothpaste all over the sink.
“I went for death,” Mata said, noting that he had considered testimony about childhood abuse of the defendant. “Though it was a hard decision because I understand his past of him being abused and him having a psycho wife ... had that influence.”
Fellow juror Betty Jane Auten said she considered the influence of Delilah Williams on her husband, “but Naeem could have stopped Delilah at any time from hurting his child.”
Some jurors said her plea deal was unfair.
“I just felt that was a done deal, we can’t change that,” Auten said. “We need to be focusing on his actions and what he did and didn’t do to protect his daughter.”
When jurors were finally able to discuss the case with each other, they unloaded their feelings about the horrible things done to the child.
“People were crying, screaming, just getting out all the emotion that we had to keep in for so long,” Mata said.
When Delilah Williams, 30, completes the remainder of her sentence, she’ll be about 40.
“Given her conduct (at the Honolulu Federal Detention Center), she’s probably not going to get a lot of good behavior credit,” Silvert said.