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Sugar Cookie

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Tyler Martinson, 28, has been charged with 31 counts of felony aggravated child abuse for allegedly injuring a 3-month-old infant to the point that he was hospitalized with broken bones.

The investigation regarding Martinson and the infant’s injuries date back to Jan. 2, after Campbell County Memorial Hospital emergency room staff contacted the Gillette Police Department (GPD) to report potential child abuse, according to the affidavit filed in the case.

The infant had been brought to the emergency room by Martinson and a woman, whose identity has been withheld to protect the identity of the infant, after they reportedly noticed the infant’s ribs were popping with every breath and were swollen.

Martinson advised ER staff that the baby was not using his right leg, which was splayed to the side and not moving. Hospital staff informed investigators that the baby was “screaming and inconsolable,” according to the affidavit.

Court documents further allege that Martinson told doctors “I might have been a little rough.”

Examinations revealed the baby had suffered 26 separate fractures to his ribs and five fractures to his legs, all of which were in various stages of healing, according to court documents.

Martinson allegedly also stated that he did not know how to pick up or handle an infant and had injured the infant several times over the past three months since the baby was born, the affidavit stated.

When asked to explain by investigators what had happened, Martinson allegedly told them “I got so angry, you know, I just have a lot going on and I just lost it, I guess,” according to the affidavit.

The female also allegedly informed investigators that she witnessed Martinson being “too rough” with the infant on several occasions that had resulted in bruising.

Due to the extent of his injuries, the infant was transferred to an out-of-state health care facility for treatment.
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That child has old mafia face.
I would have been afraid to harm him cuz he might have...connections.

As for Alfalfa here...we all know what he needs.
Shatter the legs first, then move on to the ribs.
Use ball peen hammers.

The female needs a beating too for keeping her mouth shut and legs open on behalf of Cowlick Coward.
 
The mother of a 3-month-old child who allegedly suffered 31 broken bones at the hands of his father now faces criminal charges for knowingly endangering the infant and failing to act on the abuse, according to an affidavit of probable cause filed in the case.

Keasha Bullinger, 28, has been charged with one count of felony aggravated child abuse for allegedly failing to act on multiple incidents of abuse inflicted on her 3-month-old son by 28-year-old Tyler Martinson (County 17, Jan. 5), court documents state.

She is also charged with seven misdemeanor counts of child endangerment after reportedly leaving her son in the care of Martinson several times over the course of three months, while allegedly knowing of and witnessing the abuse, according to the affidavit.

Court documents state that the alleged abuse began shortly after the infant was born, with Martinson slipping into anxiety and depression as he struggled with feelings of ineptitude.

Bullinger reportedly witnessed Martinson showing signs of resentment towards the infant and picking him up “too fast or too rough,” causing the infant to scream in pain, according to the affidavit.

She allegedly spoke with Martinson on several occasions about his rough handling of the infant, the physical bruising the handling caused and would “get up in (Martinson’s) face about it,” court documents state.

On one occasion while Martinson was changing the 3-month-old’s diaper, Bullinger reportedly walked into the room to find the infant making a “gurgling sound” from blood in his mouth after he defecated on Martinson and himself.

According to court documents, Bullinger questioned Martinson about the blood, but she didn’t take any other action after he denied knowing anything about it.

Following another incident between Dec. 29 and Dec. 31, 2020, Bullinger reportedly told Martinson that he needed to work on his relationship with the 3-month-old.

“You need to understand that at this point, he’s so used to you hurting him he feels like he’s about to get hurt. He’s not dumb, they can’t do a whole lot, but I think he’d be able to recognize that,” Bullinger allegedly told Martinson, according to the affidavit.

Despite witnessing multiple abuse incidents by Martinson, to the point the infant would scream every time he saw him, Bullinger reportedly returned to work and left the infant in Martinson’s unsupervised care, according to the affidavit.

Court documents further allege that the 3-month-old infant was taken to the emergency room at Campbell County Memorial Hospital on Jan. 2 after Martinson and Bullinger noticed the infant’s ribs were swollen, popping and cracking each time he took a breath.

The infant also wasn’t using his right leg, the affidavit states.

A bedside examination by hospital staff revealed the infant had multiple broken bones including his ribs, legs, and ankles.

A follow up examination by a hospital in Colorado, where the infant was transferred due to the extent of his injuries, revealed the infant had 26 rib and five leg fractures, the worst of which was a fracture to the infant’s right upper femur, according to court documents.

Physicians concluded the injuries could only be caused by high-speed, brute-force trauma such as extreme squeezing or shaking of the infant’s torso, per the affidavit. The physician likened the force necessary to inflict the injuries on the infant to that of a vehicle accident.

During the ensuing investigation, Martinson allegedly told investigators, “I might have been a little rough,” on several occasions, the most recent of which involved him aggressively cycling the infant’s legs to help him pass gas, court documents state.

When asked what happened in a follow up interview by police detectives, Martinson told them “I got angry, you know, I just have a lot going on and I just lost it, I guess,” according to statements made in the affidavit.

When detectives asked Bullinger what it would have taken for her to do something about Martinson’s behavior, she reportedly stated the infant would have to be “screaming in pain,” the affidavit stated, adding that she would have done something more about the blood in the infant’s mouth if she thought it was caused by Martinson.

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“You need to understand that at this point, he’s so used to you hurting him he feels like he’s about to get hurt. He’s not dumb, they can’t do a whole lot, but I think he’d be able to recognize that,” Bullinger allegedly told Martinson, according to the affidavit.

Mom need's her pussy kicked in.
 
I will just never understand this! How, What could an innocent wee babe possibly do that could ever make you that mad?? Unless he’s just someone who should never be in free society, much less be alone with anyone not able to defend them selves! The female! She knew!! She went to work and left a denfenseless wee babe alone with a violent bruiser abuser !!
 
Tyler Bryan Martinson, 28, entered a not guilty plea for all 31 charges at his arraignment Tuesday afternoon before District Judge Stuart S. Healy III.

Martinson was arrested in January after his 3-month-old son was found with 26 rib fractures and five broken bones in his legs. The worst fracture was to the child’s upper femur, according to court documents.
Martinson was supported by some of his friends and family Tuesday afternoon, including Keasha Bullinger, the boy’s mother, who was there with the baby.

The boy’s parents had taken him to the emergency room Jan. 2 because he was crying and “inconsolable,” and a popping sound from his ribs when he breathed worried them. His right leg also wasn’t moving.
Tests showed that the baby had “multiple bilateral posterior breaks to his ribs that were in various stages of healing,” according to an affidavit of probable cause filed in the case. “These breaks showed they were in three different stages of healing.”

The child also had a 45-degree angle break to his right femur along with a break to the end of the femur by his kneecap. There were two breaks in his right tibia by his ankles. He also had a break to his left femur by his kneecap, the affidavit said.
The emergency room physician told police that his injuries came from “high speed brute force” trauma like extreme squeezing or shaking the baby. She compared the amount of force necessary to create the injuries to that of a vehicle crash.

The boy was flown to University of Children’s Hospital Colorado in Aurora, Colorado, for treatment of his injuries.

Martinson had been alone with the baby the night before while Bullinger worked, according to the affidavit.
Martinson told police that he thought the boy had a bowel obstruction in the middle of the night. He “was pushing on his legs, trying to help him poop because it helped last time,” he told authorities. “I must have gone to(o) hard.”

A detective asked if he thought he was pushing into the child’s ribs as he pushed on his legs. Martinson replied that he thought he was pushing into the boy’s stomach and that the baby grunted as Martinson pushed, according to the affidavit.
Martinson told police that he had noticed that he was not as gentle as he should have been with the baby because he has never had children before. He described an instance about two weeks before when he picked up the baby and left bruises on him.

He was asked if he might have picked him up too tightly that night and cracked his ribs.
“It’s hard to say,” Martinson said, according to the affidavit. “I might have, because I have in the past. I just wasn’t as gentle as I thought I was being with him.”

About 10 days earlier, Martinson said he saw bruises on the baby’s chest where his thumbs had pressed into him and knew that he had gone too far, according to the affidavit.

At the local hospital, police noted four bruises on the baby’s chest and one on his back consistent with fingertips.
At Children’s Hospital, the baby also was found to have extra fluid around his brain and an elevated liver enzyme level that is indicative of trauma, according to the affidavit.

The injuries to the child’s lower legs would be caused by “pulling or yanking” and the other injuries would come from “very forceful handling,” according to the affidavit. The doctor diagnosed them as child abuse.

Were the charges against the mother dropped since she was with the baby?
 
Martinson , Tyler B

Status:Inmate
Projected Discharge Date: 12/1/2027
Parole Eligibility Date:3/27/2025
Current Offense:Child Abuse, Aggravated
Count #:6
Sentence Date:7/25/2022
Length of Sentence:4 To 8 Years


Keasha Bullinger will receive three years’ unsupervised probation and must attend child care classes after she pled no contest Monday to one charge of child endangerment.
 
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