Despite the fact that he admits killing his 4-month-old son, dad FRANCISCO JAVIER MARTINEZ has managed to plea bargain down from a 1st-degree felony child abuse charge (life in prison) to a 2nd-degree felony child abuse charge (up to 15 years in prison). Such a deal. In return, he will help educate medical experts in the "physical mechanisms of child abuse" that scummy fathers, or rather Stressed Parents, employ.
I'm not getting this. What is so complicated about understanding how some freaking creep beat his kid to death? This just sounds weirdly voyeuristic to me.
And all this is supposed to help daddy "heal" too. Are you sh***ing me?
And where was Mom while Daddy was pulling all this crap? Not one word about that here, nor how she feels about all this. Somehow I'm guessing that watching Daddy "re-enact" the crimes that killed her baby (in return for a maximum 15 year jail sentence) isn't going to help her "heal" much. But then the mother's grief isn't acknowledged at all here, given that she's been totally erased. Just as if Daddy had found this baby four months before his murder in some Utah cabbage patch. No human mother here, folks. Move right along.
INVISIBLE MOTHER ALERT.
http://www.sltrib.com/sltrib/home/51174776-76/child-martinez-abuse-plea.html.csp
Logan man to re-enact child abuse as part of plea
By stephen hunt
The Salt Lake Tribune
First published Feb 02 2011 10:39AM
Updated 2 hours ago Updated Feb 2, 2011 05:25PM
A North Logan man has admitted fatally injuring his 4-month-old son and — as part of his plea deal — will re-create the crime to help medical experts better understand the physical mechanisms of child abuse.
Francisco Javier Martinez, 37, pleaded guilty Tuesday to one count of second-degree felony child abuse homicide for the November 2009 death of Jesus Yandel Martinez.
The father faces up to 15 years in prison when he is sentenced April 19 by 1st District Judge Kevin Allen.
Martinez was initially charged with the more serious crime of first-degree felony child abuse homicide, which carries a sentence of up to life in prison. He also was charged with two counts of intentionally inflicting physical harm on a child. Those counts were dismissed in exchange for Martinez’s guilty plea.
Defense attorney James J. Lee said Wednesday the resolution of the case was “fair.”
Lee added that the re-creation of the abuse, which will be videotaped using a special doll designed to measure shaking and impact forces, will contribute to medical science and also help with his client’s “healing process.”
During Tuesday’s plea hearing, prosecutors told the judge that Martinez has described three separate events in 2009 that resulted in injury to the infant.
• In October, Martinez fractured the baby’s leg by grabbing him and pulling him across a bed.
• In mid-November, he held the boy’s torso with sufficient pressure to fracture two ribs.
• On Nov. 18, the father held the child upside down by his abdomen and twice slammed the baby’s head into his lap.
The infant stopped breathing soon after the slamming episode, and Martinez called 911. The child, who suffered brain injuries, was pronounced dead four days later at Primary Children’s Medical Center in Salt Lake City.