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Lizard

Veteran Member
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SASKATOON - A 26-year-old woman appeared in court Wednesday morning on charges relating to the death of her daughter.

Shatoya Cheyenne Chatelaine, just 17-months old, was found dead in an apartment Dec. 11, 2006.

Her mother had called police that day, and officers found the child suffering from malnutrition and suspicious injuries. Four other children, ages 10 and under, were also in the apartment.

An autopsy showed evidence of physical abuse against Shatoya, consisting of broken ribs and various contusions on the body.

She died from an untreated infection.

http://www.canada.com/reginaleaderp...=c9a09381-83f3-476a-bd79-04f74806d118&k=25886

God, that poor baby.
 
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She has a Bebo page, but I don't have a Bebo account.

I don't either. After getting a Fubar account to see what that one crazy bitch was doing, I'm not sure I want anymore social crap accounts. :p

Another thing... if that baby was already stiff and blue, that mother had not checked on him for a while. Rigor commences in 3 hours, reaching maximum stiffness after 12 hours.

*sigh*
 
Mom requests sentencing circle after baby dies of untreated infection

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A Saskatoon woman whose baby daughter died of an untreated infection almost five years ago would like a sentencing circle to determine her punishment, her lawyer told a Queen's Bench judge Monday.

Charissma DeeDee McDonald, 29, pleaded guilty to a charge of criminal negligence causing death for failing to ensure her 17-month-old daughter, Shatoya Cheyenne Chatelaine, received medical care for a common infection that proved fatal. Shatoya was found dead in her crib on Dec. 11, 2006.
[...]

At the request of defence lawyer Kevin Hill, Justice Neil Gabrielson ordered a pre-sentence report to canvas the possibility of a sentencing circle and a community-based sentence with electronic monitoring.

Crown prosecutor Sheryl Fillo told court the official cause of the baby's death was a bacterial infection commonly known as impetigo.

A local family doctor made a house call to examine Shatoya at McDonald's apartment on Nov. 27, 2006, Fillo said. McDonald was not home that night and an uncle was looking after the child.

The doctor noted extensive infection around the baby's mouth and face, which would have caused problems with feeding, and he recommended Shatoya be taken to Royal University Hospital's pediatric emergency ward for treatment, Fillo said.

The doctor spoke to McDonald by phone the following morning and instructed her to take the child to the hospital right away, because he felt she would need intravenous antibiotics to fight the infection, Fillo said.

"He did not ever see the child after that date and the facts are that the accused did not take the child to hospital and did not seek further medical attention," she told court.
http://www.vancouversun.com/news/re...y+dies+untreated+infection/5709432/story.html

Fillo said extensive background details will be heard in court when sentencing gets underway next year.

In an interview with The StarPhoenix shortly after McDonald’s arrest, city police said Shatoya’s death was referred to major crimes investigators after an autopsy confirmed she was malnourished and had suffered physical abuse, including broken ribs and various contusions.

McDonald’s sister Tara told the newspaper Shatoya was placed in a foster home soon after she was born because McDonald was struggling with drug abuse. The baby was returned to McDonald’s care by Social Services a few months before she died.

According to her sister, McDonald was attending a daily drug treatment program while trying to care for all five of her children by herself and did not want to ask for help because she was afraid social workers would take Shatoya away from her again.

After her arrest, McDonald’s four other children were apprehended by Social Services and placed in the care of their grandmother.

Friends of the foster family who looked after Shatoya for nearly a year have said the baby was born addicted to heroin, suffering withdrawal symptoms for several months before she began to thrive in their care and became a happy, chubby little girl. They said she was healthy and just starting to walk when she was returned to McDonald’s custody.

Social Services officials have declined to comment on the case, citing confidentiality rules.
http://www.montrealgazette.com/news...guilt+death+month+daughter/5707340/story.html

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did not want to ask for help because she was afraid social workers would take Shatoya away from her again.

Yeah, far better to starve, beat and neglect the baby to death than to risk having her taken away and put with a decent family. She die of impetigo, ffs?

It must be absolutely devastating and disheartening for the foster families who nurse these neglected/abused/addict babies back to health, see them blossom into happy and healthy toddlers, and then have to stand by helplessly while they are taken away and returned to the asshole parents to wind up dead from horrible neglect and abuse.

They had her for almost a year and helped her develop into that beautiful, smiley little girl, her 'mother' had her a few months and beat, starved and broke her to death.
 
Neglected Saskatchewan tot abused before her death, court hears
A 16-month-old girl who died from a rampant skin infection, while starved to skin and bone, had been seen by a doctor two weeks before her death, a sentencing judge heard Friday.

Shatoya Cheyenne Chatelaine’s bruised and battered body was found in her crib Dec. 11, 2006.

Her mother, Charissma Deedee McDonald, 30, who has pleaded guilty to criminal negligence causing death, will find out June 30 if she will go to prison for the crime.

Crown prosecutor Sheryl Fillo is asking Justice Neil Gabrielson to impose three years in a federal institution for the woman who provided proper care for her five other children but neglected the one child with whom she had not bonded.

Shatoya had spent the first year of her life in foster care, after being born addicted to morphine.

Foster mother Gayle Warkentin, provided photographs of the chubby, healthy baby she delivered back to McDonald on May 30, 2006.

An autopsy showed that in the next six months, Shatoya suffered a broken arm, broken ribs, concussions and bruises, all on different occasions and none of which had been treated by a doctor.

Autopsy photographs showed she had lost weight until she was just “skin and bone,â€￾ Fillo said.

The child’s face was spotted with impetigo, a common, easily treated skin infection that spread even into her mouth, making eating difficult.

Within three months of going back into her mother’s care, Shatoya had also been hospitalized with second-degree burns from being immersed in a tub of scalding water.

A child protection worker, Shawna Dickhoff, and Saskatoon Tribal Council worker, Pauline Cardinal, had been assigned to the case, but neither of them was aware that McDonald was having difficulty caring for Shatoya after her release from the hospital in August 2006.

McDonald had four children older than Shatoya and a baby who was born in September 2006, three months before Shatoya’s death.

The children’s father had been jail for much of that year and was in custody at the time of the death.

Dickhoff had said McDonald’s home was the cleanest, best-kept home of any of the 44 families in her case file, Fillo said.

On November 27, a doctor made a house call to the apartment where McDonald’s brother, Lonnie McDonald, was babysitting.

The next day on the phone, the doctor told McDonald to take Shatoya to the hospital emergency department because she was very sick with the skin infection.

McDonald never did.

She also refused offers from family members to drive her and Shatoya to the hospital, Fillo said.

In victim impact statements that were read in court, Warkentin, her husband and four children spoke of the pain they suffer thinking of the “gruesome details of Shatoya’s death at the hands of her mother.â€￾

Warkentin said she still fosters children in need but she no longer trusts the words of biological parents or social workers.

“Where were they?â€￾ she said.

Defense lawyer Kevin Hill is asking for his client to be allowed to serve an 18 month sentence in the community, saying that as an aboriginal person, McDonald had a fear of the state that affected her decision to hide the baby’s illness from social workers and health care officials.

McDonald’s sister, Tara Lee McDonald, said in a statement Friday her sister loved her child and thinks about her every day.

Tara McDonald noted that all members of Shatoya’s foster family were invited to make victim impact statements for the judge to consider but no one from Shatoya’s biological family was given the same consideration.

“What does that tell you?â€￾ she said.
http://www.thestarphoenix.com/health/Neglected+abused+before+death+court+hears/6680176/story.html
 
Tara McDonald noted that all members of Shatoya’s foster family were invited to make victim impact statements for the judge to consider but no one from Shatoya’s biological family was given the same consideration.

“What does that tell you?â€￾ she said.


That the court does not expect the biological family to make statements damaging to the defendant? :stupido3:
 
Mother sentenced to 2 years over baby's death
A woman who allowed her baby to die of an untreated infection has been sentenced to two years less a day in jail.

Six years ago Charissma Deedee McDonald's 17-month old daughter Shatoya Cheyenne Chatelaine was found dead in her crib.

The child died after contracting impetigo cantagiosa, a common — and treatable — bacterial infection.

McDonald pleaded guilty last November to criminal negligence causing death.

When McDonald heard the sentence Wednesday, she called out to a relative in the court, "Take care of my babies." [...]
http://www.cbc.ca/news/canada/saskatchewan/story/2012/06/20/sk-sentence-mom-baby-death-120620.html
 
When McDonald heard the sentence Wednesday, she called out to a relative in the court, "Take care of my babies."

Just why would they allow anyone in her family to be in the lives of her children.

The family failed to protect Shatoya so I am sure they will allow this woman back in the lives of her surviving children once she completes a whole 3 years :rolleyes: for killing her child.

Her sentence is hardly enough punishment for taking a child from a loving environment just to abuse and neglect them.


She wanted a sentencing circle and appealed because she was denied.
Sentencing - General - Establishment of sentencing or healing circle - The aboriginal accused pled guilty to criminal negligence causing the death of her 17 month old daughter - The accused requested that a sentencing circle be held - The sentencing judge decided not to order a sentencing circle - The judge held that the proposed members of the sentencing circle did not meet the definition of "community" referred to in the case authorities - It was proposed that the sentencing circle be held in the City of Saskatoon - Although the accused had lived in Saskatoon for at least 15 years, there was no evidence that she had deep roots in the community - All of the proposed participants were family members or quasi-family members and none of them lived in Saskatoon except for the accused's common law spouse - While two additional participants proposed by the accused's counsel had roots in Saskatoon, they did not have a relationship with the accused - The judge stated that "I am not satisfied that what is proposed is a community to which the accused will account nor a community which will take responsibility for the accused" - The accused appealed the decision not to hold a sentencing circle - The Saskatchewan Court of Appeal dismissed the appeal - See paragraph 9.
Sentencing Circles A sentencing circle is a community-directed process, conducted in partnership with the criminal justice system, to develop consensus on an appropriate sentencing plan that addresses the concerns of all interested parties. Sentencing circles — sometimes called peacemaking circles — use traditional circle ritual and structure to involve the victim, victim supporters, the offender, offender supporters, judge and court personnel, prosecutor, defense counsel, police, and all interested community members. Within the circle, people can speak from the heart in a shared search for understanding of the event, and together identify the steps necessary to assist in healing all affected parties and prevent future crimes. Sentencing circles typically involve a multi-step procedure that includes: (1) application by the offender to participate in the circle process; (2) a healing circle for the victim; (3) a healing circle for the offender; (4) a sentencing circle to develop consensus on the elements of a sentencing plan; and (5) follow-up circles to monitor the progress of the offender. The sentencing plan may incorporate commitments by the system, community, and family members, as well as by the offender. Sentencing circles are used for adult and juvenile offenders with a variety of offenses and have been used in both rural and urban settings. Specifics of the circle process vary from community to community and are designed locally to fit community needs and culture. Sentencing circles have been developed most extensively in Saskatchewan, Manitoba, and the Yukon and have been used occasionally in several other communities. Their use spread to the United States in 1996 when a pilot project was initiated in Minnesota. Goals The goals of sentencing circles include: • Promote healing for all affected parties. • Provide an opportunity for the offender to make amends. • Empower victims, community members, families, and offenders by giving them a voice and a shared responsibility in finding constructive resolutions. • Address the underlying causes of criminal behavior. • Build a sense of community and its capacity for resolving conflict. • Promote and share community values.
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From 2013
The province's Court of Appeal has sentenced a Saskatoon woman whose neglect killed her daughter to prison, not jail.

Charissma Deedee McDonald’s daughter died of an untreated skin infection in 2006. McDonald pleaded guilty to criminal negligence causing death and was sentenced last year to two years less a day.
But earlier this month the Court of Appeal increased that sentence to three years – a penitentiary term.

"The facts of this case show that Ms. McDonald’s daughter was subject to a prolonged period of neglect," the Court of Appeal judges wrote.

The judges said that this conscious decision not to seek medical treatment is just as serious as situations where the death of a child is caused by intentional force.
 
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