Sunday, August 16, 2015

Sole custody dad pleads not guilty for reasons of insanity; 18-month-old daughter's body found decaying in crib (Cleveland, Ohio)

Getting caught up on cases over the past week or so.

We posted on dad ERIC WARFEL earlier. Notice that the press is no longer mentioning that this POS had sole custody, much less delving into what POS judge gave it to him.

We've been previously told that the mother had drug problems too. Fine. But Daddy now claims he's crazy in addition to his OWN drug problems and basically being homeless.

Please explain to me just how it is the Killer Daddy is the superior parent. I'm not seeing it.

Looks like classic Father Favoritism to me.

http://news.yahoo.com/father-ohio-child-found-weeks-dead-pleads-not-173638447.html

Father of Ohio child found weeks-dead pleads not guilty, insanity .

Reuters
By Kim Palmer August 10, 2015 1:36 PM

CLEVELAND (Reuters) - An Ohio man charged with leaving the decomposing body of his 18-month-old daughter in a crib surrounded by garbage entered a plea of not guilty by reason of insanity on Monday, according to Medina County court documents.

Eric Warfel, 35 was charged with one count of abuse of a corpse after a cable installer discover the body of Ember Warfel late last month in his apartment south of Cleveland. She had been dead for at least a month.

Prosecutors added a tampering with evidence charge, also a felony and set bond at $1 million. They said they expect more charges once a cause of death for the child is determined.

Police found cocaine in the motel room where Warfel had been living before the discovery of his daughter. Drug possession and endangering children charges are expected, according to prosecutors.

Police are also looking into the 2013 death of Warfel's 5-month-old child whose cause of death was ruled undetermined by a Cuyahoga County medical examiner.

Warfel will receive a psychological evaluation and Medina County Common Pleas Judge Christopher Collier set a pretrial date for Nov. 5 and a trial date for Nov. 9.