Showing posts with label Mississsippi. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Mississsippi. Show all posts
Tuesday, December 6, 2011
Dad charged with capital murder in death of 1-year-old daughter (Jackson, Mississippi)
Dad is identified as NATYYO GRAY. Sounds like it could be one of those cases where Daddy just didn't want to pay child support....
http://www.clarionledger.com/article/20111206/NEWS/112060333/Infant-s-injuries-extensive
Infant's injuries extensive
Case against former officer goes to grand jury
10:58 PM, Dec. 5, 2011
An infant whose father is charged with capital murder in her death was in good health as recently as September, a detective testified Monday at a hearing in which police laid out their case.
But about two months later, 1-year-old Aubrey Zoe Brown, allegedly was fatally injured while being abused by her father, Natyyo Gray, 36, a former Jackson Police Department detective.
"It wasn't until the child was in his sole custody for that brief period when the child was hurt?" Assistant District Attorney Scott Rogillio asked Detective Eric Smith. "And hurt is a very loose term, wouldn't you agree?"
"Very loose," said Smith, the sole witness during Gray's packed preliminary hearing before Hinds County Judge Houston Patton.
Zoe sustained bruises to her forehead, back and pelvis, extensive abdominal bruising, and a large hematoma on the top of her head. She also had a lacerated liver and pancreas. Rogillio told the court she was bleeding from her anus as a result of trauma to her intestines. The cause of death was internal injuries.
Gray's attorney, Aafram Sellers, said his client maintains he is innocent. Sellers asked Smith about intent.
"I have no proof he actually intended to hurt the child," Smith replied.
Smith detailed the events of Nov. 20, when Zoe's mother, Phyllis Brown, left the child with Gray while she was at church. After church, she stopped at a department store and was there when she got a call from Gray that something was wrong with Zoe and she needed to come to the hospital.
Smith testified Gray had called the ambulance to the home he shared with Brown, and when emergency officials arrived, he was performing compressions on her abdomen.
Gray is certified in CPR and should have known how to do the compressions correctly, Smith testified.
Smith said Gray told him in questioning that he thought the child was constipated and was trying to massage her stomach. Smith testified that doctors and pathologists told him there was no possible way the child's injuries were caused by a belly massage or CPR.
Sellers said Gray would not have been able to be a police officer and to work his way through the ranks if he had a criminal history. He pointed out that Gray had called the ambulance and had tried to perform lifesaving procedures on the child when he found she was unresponsive.
Sellers told Patton he feared parents would become afraid of taking their children to the hospital with accidental injuries because they could end up being prosecuted.
"There has to be something more than just injuries," Sellers said.
"If a child is bleeding out of its anus from internal injuries, I would expect that this DA's office will prosecute," Rogillio countered.
The courtroom was filled with members of both Gray's family, some of whom had traveled in from Chicago, and Brown's family, who all wore badges that said, "Justice for Zoe."
Gray sat on the edge of his seat throughout the proceeding.
Brown, a biology teacher, mostly kept her head down and left without comment when the hearing was over. Family members had consoled her throughout the hearing.
Alice Jones, Gray's aunt from Chicago, said authorities should be looking at the mother's side of the family for the blame, and that the testimony presented by Smith was false.
"Baloney," she said. "It's not true. I practically raised him. That is not him they're talking about."
Brown's family members would not comment beyond saying they are still shocked and saddened by the situation.
Court papers show Brown had gone to court earlier this year to get financial support from Gray for Zoe, who was born in September 2010.
Gray had denied fathering the child and had said he wanted nothing to do with her, according to records from the court proceedings.
However, at some point after Brown had been awarded custody and child support, she and Gray began living at the same Monroe Street address. One of Brown's family members has said she lived there on weekends but she and Zoe spent weekdays in Meridian, where Brown worked.
What type of relationship the two had at the time of the child's death has not been publicly explained.
Patton referred Gray's case to a grand jury, and granted no bond, which is typical for a capital murder charge.
Sellers said his team is still gathering information.
"Mr. Gray denies these charges and we believe him in his denial, but we don't have any physical evidence to look at, just what the detective testified to," he said after the preliminary hearing.
http://www.clarionledger.com/article/20111206/NEWS/112060333/Infant-s-injuries-extensive
Infant's injuries extensive
Case against former officer goes to grand jury
10:58 PM, Dec. 5, 2011
An infant whose father is charged with capital murder in her death was in good health as recently as September, a detective testified Monday at a hearing in which police laid out their case.
But about two months later, 1-year-old Aubrey Zoe Brown, allegedly was fatally injured while being abused by her father, Natyyo Gray, 36, a former Jackson Police Department detective.
"It wasn't until the child was in his sole custody for that brief period when the child was hurt?" Assistant District Attorney Scott Rogillio asked Detective Eric Smith. "And hurt is a very loose term, wouldn't you agree?"
"Very loose," said Smith, the sole witness during Gray's packed preliminary hearing before Hinds County Judge Houston Patton.
Zoe sustained bruises to her forehead, back and pelvis, extensive abdominal bruising, and a large hematoma on the top of her head. She also had a lacerated liver and pancreas. Rogillio told the court she was bleeding from her anus as a result of trauma to her intestines. The cause of death was internal injuries.
Gray's attorney, Aafram Sellers, said his client maintains he is innocent. Sellers asked Smith about intent.
"I have no proof he actually intended to hurt the child," Smith replied.
Smith detailed the events of Nov. 20, when Zoe's mother, Phyllis Brown, left the child with Gray while she was at church. After church, she stopped at a department store and was there when she got a call from Gray that something was wrong with Zoe and she needed to come to the hospital.
Smith testified Gray had called the ambulance to the home he shared with Brown, and when emergency officials arrived, he was performing compressions on her abdomen.
Gray is certified in CPR and should have known how to do the compressions correctly, Smith testified.
Smith said Gray told him in questioning that he thought the child was constipated and was trying to massage her stomach. Smith testified that doctors and pathologists told him there was no possible way the child's injuries were caused by a belly massage or CPR.
Sellers said Gray would not have been able to be a police officer and to work his way through the ranks if he had a criminal history. He pointed out that Gray had called the ambulance and had tried to perform lifesaving procedures on the child when he found she was unresponsive.
Sellers told Patton he feared parents would become afraid of taking their children to the hospital with accidental injuries because they could end up being prosecuted.
"There has to be something more than just injuries," Sellers said.
"If a child is bleeding out of its anus from internal injuries, I would expect that this DA's office will prosecute," Rogillio countered.
The courtroom was filled with members of both Gray's family, some of whom had traveled in from Chicago, and Brown's family, who all wore badges that said, "Justice for Zoe."
Gray sat on the edge of his seat throughout the proceeding.
Brown, a biology teacher, mostly kept her head down and left without comment when the hearing was over. Family members had consoled her throughout the hearing.
Alice Jones, Gray's aunt from Chicago, said authorities should be looking at the mother's side of the family for the blame, and that the testimony presented by Smith was false.
"Baloney," she said. "It's not true. I practically raised him. That is not him they're talking about."
Brown's family members would not comment beyond saying they are still shocked and saddened by the situation.
Court papers show Brown had gone to court earlier this year to get financial support from Gray for Zoe, who was born in September 2010.
Gray had denied fathering the child and had said he wanted nothing to do with her, according to records from the court proceedings.
However, at some point after Brown had been awarded custody and child support, she and Gray began living at the same Monroe Street address. One of Brown's family members has said she lived there on weekends but she and Zoe spent weekdays in Meridian, where Brown worked.
What type of relationship the two had at the time of the child's death has not been publicly explained.
Patton referred Gray's case to a grand jury, and granted no bond, which is typical for a capital murder charge.
Sellers said his team is still gathering information.
"Mr. Gray denies these charges and we believe him in his denial, but we don't have any physical evidence to look at, just what the detective testified to," he said after the preliminary hearing.
Wednesday, November 2, 2011
Child abuse more likely in single father families (Jackson, Mississippi)
Notice the interesting spin on this research. "Blended" families are blamed for child abuse, while not acknowledging that "intact" married-couple families are far more likely to be middle-class with little to no history of violence, drug abuse, alcoholism, chronic unemployment, etc. So yes, happy families with few problems tend to produce happy children with few problems who are not abused. It's kind of a "duh" conclusion.
In a sense, it's not that "blended" families are worse per se. It's that by definitition, they already have a high number of adults who have failed relationships for whatever reason.
But what IS interesting, is that after the parents split, single father families have much higher rates of abuse than single mother families. This has been known for years--we have documented the various studies here--but this data is generally buried under a ton of "pathological mother" propaganda that confused single-mother households with impoverished households. Yes, the father is "gone" in a lot of these poor single-mother households. But that's because he 's in prison, living on the streets, lost to drugs, etc. Installing these kinds of dads back in the home wouldn't solve anything.
Of course, the Heritage Foundation as a right-wing think tank is quick to bash co-habitating moms for living with violent boyfriends. But they won't say a thing to alienate their fathers rights supporters, who as a group, have even a worse track record.
http://www.wapt.com/r/29637762/detail.html
Disturbing Child Abuse Trend Identified
Study: Children Of Blended Families More Likely To Face Abuse
POSTED: 11:01 am CDT October 31, 2011
UPDATED: 8:44 am CDT November 1, 2011
JACKSON, Miss. -- Don Taylor, who ran the Mississippi Department of Human Services for 10 years, said he saw a disturbing trend during his time there.
"A child is six times more likely to be abused living in a blended family, where mother is remarried," Taylor said. "It is 14 times more likely to be abused if living with a single mother and 20 times more likely to be abused if living with a single father."
Taylor cited research from the Heritage Foundation, in which one survey showed children are 73 percent more likely to be fatally abused when a mother lives with her boyfriend. The same research says children are 20 percent more likely to be abused with unmarried biological parents.
In the past year, 16 WAPT News has covered several high-profile cases that seem to mirror that trend, 16 WAPT's Tammy Estwick reported.
In August, police in Tylertown arrested Dusty Lowery, 26, who is accused of beating his girlfriend's 16-month-old to death.
A Wathall County man is behind bars after the toddler he was caring for died from injuries.
In April, Yazoo County detectives charged William Strickland and Brittany Taggart and accused them of abusing a 6-week-old girl. Medical records claim the abuse started when the baby was only 2 weeks old, authorities said.
The latest child abuse case was reported in October in Rankin County. Prosecutors have called it the worst case they've ever seen -- a 3-year-old boy was beaten so badly he couldn't even move, authorities said.
"The child had suffered just a battery of injuries, broken ribs, cracked rib, pelvis, clavicle. Classic signs of felonious child abuse," said Michael Guest, the district attorney for Madison and Rankin counties.
The affidavit from the District Attorney's Office listed accusations including torture and mutilation.
Prosecutors charged the child's father, Steven Magee, and his live-in girlfriend Rebecca Harrell with 14 counts each of felony child abuse. The boy is still recovering after five surgeries, authorities said.
Clay Moak lives a few homes away from Magee.
"It makes me feel awful. It's just disgusting that somebody would do that to a child that can't protect himself," Moak said.
Moak said the charges caught him and other neighbors off guard.
"That's shocking news, to hear that it was right down the street from me," resident Dorothy Harper said. "That's a hurting feeling to hear about a child like that being hurt."
Taylor said the only way to change the disturbing trend is to work on the family structure.
"America, right now, is on the cusp of sacrificing our children on the altar of political correctness," Taylor said. "I think there's also a certain amount of jealousy too. When you're cohabiting with another person and they're not the parent, the biological parent of that child, I think that breeds resentment on their part, maybe."
Taylor said without more committed family units, child abuse could be a hard battle to win.
"It goes back to, I guess, it's everyone's responsibility," Taylor said.
In a sense, it's not that "blended" families are worse per se. It's that by definitition, they already have a high number of adults who have failed relationships for whatever reason.
But what IS interesting, is that after the parents split, single father families have much higher rates of abuse than single mother families. This has been known for years--we have documented the various studies here--but this data is generally buried under a ton of "pathological mother" propaganda that confused single-mother households with impoverished households. Yes, the father is "gone" in a lot of these poor single-mother households. But that's because he 's in prison, living on the streets, lost to drugs, etc. Installing these kinds of dads back in the home wouldn't solve anything.
Of course, the Heritage Foundation as a right-wing think tank is quick to bash co-habitating moms for living with violent boyfriends. But they won't say a thing to alienate their fathers rights supporters, who as a group, have even a worse track record.
http://www.wapt.com/r/29637762/detail.html
Disturbing Child Abuse Trend Identified
Study: Children Of Blended Families More Likely To Face Abuse
POSTED: 11:01 am CDT October 31, 2011
UPDATED: 8:44 am CDT November 1, 2011
JACKSON, Miss. -- Don Taylor, who ran the Mississippi Department of Human Services for 10 years, said he saw a disturbing trend during his time there.
"A child is six times more likely to be abused living in a blended family, where mother is remarried," Taylor said. "It is 14 times more likely to be abused if living with a single mother and 20 times more likely to be abused if living with a single father."
Taylor cited research from the Heritage Foundation, in which one survey showed children are 73 percent more likely to be fatally abused when a mother lives with her boyfriend. The same research says children are 20 percent more likely to be abused with unmarried biological parents.
In the past year, 16 WAPT News has covered several high-profile cases that seem to mirror that trend, 16 WAPT's Tammy Estwick reported.
In August, police in Tylertown arrested Dusty Lowery, 26, who is accused of beating his girlfriend's 16-month-old to death.
A Wathall County man is behind bars after the toddler he was caring for died from injuries.
In April, Yazoo County detectives charged William Strickland and Brittany Taggart and accused them of abusing a 6-week-old girl. Medical records claim the abuse started when the baby was only 2 weeks old, authorities said.
The latest child abuse case was reported in October in Rankin County. Prosecutors have called it the worst case they've ever seen -- a 3-year-old boy was beaten so badly he couldn't even move, authorities said.
"The child had suffered just a battery of injuries, broken ribs, cracked rib, pelvis, clavicle. Classic signs of felonious child abuse," said Michael Guest, the district attorney for Madison and Rankin counties.
The affidavit from the District Attorney's Office listed accusations including torture and mutilation.
Prosecutors charged the child's father, Steven Magee, and his live-in girlfriend Rebecca Harrell with 14 counts each of felony child abuse. The boy is still recovering after five surgeries, authorities said.
Clay Moak lives a few homes away from Magee.
"It makes me feel awful. It's just disgusting that somebody would do that to a child that can't protect himself," Moak said.
Moak said the charges caught him and other neighbors off guard.
"That's shocking news, to hear that it was right down the street from me," resident Dorothy Harper said. "That's a hurting feeling to hear about a child like that being hurt."
Taylor said the only way to change the disturbing trend is to work on the family structure.
"America, right now, is on the cusp of sacrificing our children on the altar of political correctness," Taylor said. "I think there's also a certain amount of jealousy too. When you're cohabiting with another person and they're not the parent, the biological parent of that child, I think that breeds resentment on their part, maybe."
Taylor said without more committed family units, child abuse could be a hard battle to win.
"It goes back to, I guess, it's everyone's responsibility," Taylor said.
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