Tag Archive for 'toddler'

Fort Campbell soldier charged with child abuse

The Associated Press

CLARKSVILLE — Police say a child who a Fort Campbell soldier is accused of severely abusing has died from his injuries.

Clarksville arrested 20-year-old Joshua Ryan Starner of Clarksville, Tenn., on Saturday after the 23-month-old boy was found unresponsive in his bed at the soldier’s home.

Police spokesman Jim Knoll said that the child died Sunday at Vanderbilt Children’s Hospital in Nashville.

Starner is currently charged with aggravated child abuse and Knoll said homicide charges are pending.

His bond was set at $1 million. Starner is listed as a specialist corporal in the Army. He did not have an attorney listed in jail records on Sunday.

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Police officer: Murder suspect described assault, rape of toddler

By Steve Lannen

slannen@herald-leader.com

The 18-year-old man accused of raping and murdering a 2-year-old girl told police that he dropped the child from a height about level with his shoulders before sexually assaulting her, according to testimony Friday in a court hearing.

A Fayette County grand jury will consider the case of Brian Crabtree.

Katelynn Stinnett’s mother and some other relatives listened as a police detective recounted his interview with Crabtree.

Lexington Police Sgt. Jesse Harris testified that Crabtree gave him a taped confession several hours after the alleged crimes occurred.

According to Harris, Crabtree said he gave Katelynn a bath on the afternoon of Nov. 25, at a Lexington apartment off Versailles Road. He then dropped her from a height of about his shoulders to the floor before raping her.

Katelynn’s mother, Angela Johns, cried quietly in the courtroom, and an aunt was heard gasping, “Oh my God.”

The child died of her injuries Dec. 3.

Crabtree’s public defender Sam Cox asked Harris if he knew that Crabtree has an IQ of just 68 or that Crabtree couldn’t read or write.

Harris said Crabtree said he had graduated from high school, and Harris didn’t question Crabtree further about his education.

Harris also said that Katelynn’s older brother, 3, was in the apartment at the time that Crabtree said he attacked Katelynn. The boy told investigators, according to Harris, “Brian hit sissy. Brian hit sissy.”

Crabtree was watching the children as their father and his roommate, Daniel Stinnett, worked. Stinnett returned home from work at a fire and disaster recovery company and found his daughter in a deep sleep, according to the children’s mother, who wasn’t living with them. Because it was around the child’s nap time, Stinnett didn’t think much about it and took her to a friend’s house.

When Katelynn wouldn’t wake up, he called his mother, and they went together to the hospital.

For more coverage.

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Crabtree charges upgraded to murder

FRIDAY MORNING UPDATE:

An 18-year-old accused in the death of a 2-year-old girl was officially charged with murder Friday morning.

Assault charges against Brian Crabtree, 18, were upgraded to murder after a motion by Fayette County prosecutors. Fayette District Judge Julie M. Goodman set a new bond of $250,000.

Crabtree is accused of the assault, rape and sexual abuse of 2-year-old Katelynn Stinnett on Nov. 25 in a Lexington apartment off Versailles Road. She died from her injuries earlier this week.

Crabtree previously pleaded not guilty to the charges.

A preliminary hearing was scheduled Friday morning, but it was postponed until Dec. 12 because a public defender had just been appointed to represent Crabtree and he had not yet discussed the case with him.

Posted on Fri, Dec. 05, 2008

Toddler’s death leaves neighbors, family reeling

By Steve Lannen
slannen@herald-leader.com

At a small mobile home park tucked off Bryan Station Road in southern Bourbon County, many people knew 2-year-old Katelynn Stinnett.

They also know the teen accused of killing her.

According to police, Brian Crabtree, 18, raped and threw the girl on the floor of a Lexington apartment on Nov. 25. The toddler died from her injuries on Wednesday.

Crabtree was watching Katelynn and a 3-year-old brother while their father was at work, said Chris Baker, the uncle of Katelynn’s father, Daniel Stinnett.

Crabtree was “a quiet, well-mannered kid, but he showed what he was,” Baker said.

Crabtree is scheduled to appear Friday morning in Fayette District Court. He is already charged with assault, rape and sexual abuse, and has pleaded not guilty to those charges. The Fayette County Attorney’s Office plans to upgrade the assault charge to intentional murder.

A preliminary hearing is scheduled, but Crabtree could choose to waive the hearing and have the case sent to a grand jury. He is being held at the Fayette County jail and declined a request for an interview.

Miles away in Bourbon County at the Turfland mobile home park where he lived until recently, a brother declined to give his name, but said Brian Crabtree is innocent.

An arrest citation for Crabtree indicates he gave a recorded confession to police.

Crabtree grew up in a mobile home near a dead end and attended Bourbon County High School.

In recent weeks, Crabtree moved to a trailer on an adjacent street where he was staying with Daniel Stinnett, who was caring for Katelynn and a young son. Stinnett’s wife has not been near the family for several months, neighbors said.

Baker said Stinnett is reeling from his daughter’s death. “He’s a basket case right now,” Baker said.

Stinnett had lived for a time in the mobile home park years before with relatives, and the two men knew each other, neighbor Tim White said.

“Everybody kind of knows everybody,” he said.

For the few weeks he lived with Stinnett, Crabtree cared for the children while Stinnett was at work, Baker said.

White said that a relative of Daniel Stinnett’s had recently asked Crabtree about some bruises on Katelynn. He said Crabtree responded, “No, I’d never do nothing like that. I love that baby.”

The week before Thanksgiving, Stinnett told neighbors that he was moving to a Lexington apartment that he described as bigger and a better environment than the beige and brown trailer.

Baker said he’s not sure why his nephew and Stinnett moved out of the trailer after living there such a short time.

The two men and two children lived at the Bradford Apartments, off Versailles Road, just four days before Katelynn was injured, a woman in the management office said.

The 3-year-old boy is now in foster care, Baker said.

Vikki Franklin, a spokeswoman for the Cabinet for Health and Family Services, declined to say whether the cabinet had investigated any complaints involving Katelynn Stinnett or anyone in her family.

White said that, if Crabtree is guilty of the charges against him, “I hope he never sees the light of day.”

Funeral arrangements for Katelynn Stinnett are pending.

For more information, check with Ellison Funeral Home, (606) 549-2111.

Herald-Leader Staff Writer Beth Musgrave contributed to this story. Reach Steve Lannen at (859) 231-1328 or 1-800-950-6397, Ext. 1328.

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Paris man charged with fracturing toddler’s skull

Herald-Leader staff report

Lexington police have arrested and charged a Paris man with first-degree criminal abuse in connection with injuries, including a skull fracture, that sent a toddler to the hospital early Wednesday.

Kerry D. Kenney of Paris, Kentucky has been arrested and charged with first-degree criminal abuse for causing serious physical injury to a Lexington toddler in his care. The two year old received a skull fracture and other broken bones and injuries.

Kerry D. Kenney of Paris, Kentucky has been arrested and charged with first-degree criminal abuse for causing serious physical injury to a Lexington toddler in his care.

Police say the 2-year-old boy received a skull fracture and other broken bones and injuries while in the care of Kerry D. Kenney, 22.

Lexington police received a report about an unresponsive infant about 12:15 a.m. Wednesday from Allante Brook Court, in south Lexington off Wilson-Downing Road.

The child was transported to the University of Kentucky Medical Center for treatment.

Lexington police spokeswoman Ann Gutierrez said on Thursday that police had not been updated on the child’s condition.

The child lives with his mother and her boyfriend.

The boy’s name has not been released.

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Toddler wandered streets; grandmother charged

Central Kentucky Bureau

NICHOLASVILLE — The grandmother of a 2-year-old found walking the streets unattended was arrested Tuesday and charged with wanton endangerment, police said.

Nancy Thomas, 66, of Nicholasville was lodged in the Jessamine County jail on a felony charge of second-degree wanton endangerment, punishable by one to five years in prison, police said. No bond had been set as of Tuesday afternoon.

Police were dispatched to the city’s southwest side, where they found a 2-year-old boy wearing a diaper and wandering in a backyard on Melissa Drive.

Police began a neighborhood search for the child’s guardian. Thomas was located at her home on Pinoak Drive. She told police that she was unaware that the child had left the house.

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Store scrutinized for failing to help child in van

(Also read Bed Bath & Beyond Belief at http://mothertongue.bloginky.com/2008/09/08/bed-bath-beyond-belief/)

By Brandon Ortiz and Beth Musgrave
bortiz@herald-leader.com

UPDATED at 8:02 a.m.:

Prosecutors are reviewing state law to determine whether Bed Bath & Beyond should be charged for refusing to call police because a toddler was locked in a van in a Lexington parking lot.

First Assistant Fayette County Attorney Brian Mattone said he spent most of Sunday looking at Kentucky’s laws dealing with the reporting of child abuse. As of Monday evening, Mattone said, he had not yet decided whether Bed Bath & Beyond could be charged for failing to assist Randy and Nancy Belcher, a Danville couple who had discovered a child locked inside a van in the parking lot on Nicholasville Road.

Tanuja

Tanuja

A manager at the store told the couple — and later, police — that it was the store’s policy not to get involved in parking lot incidents.

But on Monday, an official at Bed Bath & Beyond’s corporate headquarters in New Jersey said in a written statement that the store manager must have been confused about the company’s policies.

“Be assured that, at Bed Bath & Beyond, we take matters such as these very seriously,” said Hank Reinhart, vice president of customer service. “We train our associates for emergency situations. Unfortunately, this situation was not handled in the way we would have expected it to be handled. We are taking this opportunity to retrain our associates.”

The child’s mother, Tanuja R. Patel, was arraigned Monday in Fayette District Court. She pleaded not guilty to first-degree wanton endangerment. Patel’s attorney, Fred Peters, said afterward that Patel thought she had left the van, a 2007 Honda Odyssey, running with the air conditioning on.

Peters said the level of her charge is “completely inappropriate.” Peters said Patel is being charged at the same level as someone who fires a gun at someone. At most, he said, the charge should have been child endangerment.

Mattone disagreed. Considering how long the mother was in the store, and how quickly cars can heat up, “it is such a dangerous situation it obviously could have been much worse,” he said.

Patel, 37, was released from the Fayette County Detention Center after posting a $5,000 cash bond. As a condition of the bond, she is not to have any contact with the child, 3-year-old Ryan Patel.

Peters said he is trying to get the conditions changed because the mother and child live in the same house.

A preliminary hearing for Tenuja Patel was scheduled for Sept. 26 in Fayette District Court.

Randy and Nancy Belcher were just getting out of their truck about 2:30 p.m. on Saturday when Nancy Belcher told her husband she thought there was a child in the van parked next to them. When the boy did not respond to several knocks on the window, they went into Bed Bath & Beyond and asked one of the clerks if they could use the public-address system to let customers know there was a child in a hot van.

The clerk called a manager who was less than helpful, Randy Belcher said Monday. “She said ‘we don’t deal with anything that goes on in our parking lot,’” Belcher said.

The manager also refused to phone the police or to let the Belchers use the store’s phone to dial 911. Randy Belcher had a phone locked inside his truck, and he eventually used it to call the police.

Lexington police Officer Tommy Puckett was among several officers who responded to the call on Saturday. After hearing the Belchers’ story, “I thought there must have been some kind of miscommunication,” he said Monday. But when Puckett went into the store and talked to the manager, who would not give her last name, she said it was against company policy to get involved with anything that happens in the parking lot.

“I was absolutely shocked speechless. This is one of the most disturbing things I’ve seen since I’ve been a cop,” said Puckett, an officer of nearly 35 years. “Morally, I just can’t believe that you would not call. What if that was your child out there?”

Michelle Bowe, of Nicholasville, said she saw the boy sleeping in a car seat inside the van on an 80-degree day. The van had its windows shut and was not running.

She said the sun was directly on the boy, who was wearing a long-sleeved shirt and pants and was under a blanket.

“You could see the sweat on him,” Bowe said. “I didn’t know if he was breathing. You couldn’t tell.”

Bowe said they talked about breaking a window to save the child, but then police arrived. Officers used a small device to break the window after the boy did not respond to repeated taps on the window, Belcher said. Even after the officer got the boy out, he wouldn’t wake, Belcher said.

“My heart just dropped to the ground,” Belcher said. “My wife was crying, the other woman was crying.”

Bowe and Belcher said the child had spent at least 20 to 30 minutes in the van.

According to a police report, Ryan awakened only after he was shaken by police. He was treated by paramedics and given fluids but was not taken to the hospital, witnesses said.

Reinhart said he knew of no Bed Bath & Beyond policy that would have prohibited the store manager from helping.

“We train our associates on how to respond to common emergency situations and we have no policies that should have impeded our ability to respond in this case,” Reinhart said. “This situation was not handled the way we would have expected it to be handled.”

Belcher said he was thankful that he and his wife and Bowe were there to help the boy. “I just want to thank the Lord that we were in the right place at the right time and that the boy is OK.”

Bowe, a mother of four, said she has peeked into the back seats of cars ever since hearing about an incident in the news a few years ago.

“I just kind of look in car windows, to be honest with you,” she said. “I mean, I have four children. When … you’re a mom, you’re just pretty cautious.”

Belcher said he and his wife had been going to buy something at the store on Saturday, but they decided to go home instead.

“I know we’re not going to go back in there,” he said.

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