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According to the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services, in 2003, approximately 906,000 children were victims and an
estimated 1,500 children died of abuse or neglect. Locally, according to Colorado Association of Family
and Children's Agencies (CAFCA), children in Colorado desperately need protection and care. Recently released statistics
from 2005 include: - In 2005, apporoximately 30,000 children were reported abused or neglected
and referred for investigation in Colorado.
- Out of that number, nearly 9,000 cases were substantiated
or indicated as abused. Twenty-one percent suffered physical abuse, 46.6% neglect, 1.4% medical neglect, 11.5% sexual abuse,
5% psychological maltreatment and 18% other or unknown.
- Boys and girls are equally likely to be
abused or neglected.
- Approximately 80% of child abuse is perpetrated by a parent or caregiver.
- An
average of 20 children in Colorado die from suspected abuse or neglect every year.
- Children under
the age of 4 account for 75% of all child abuse deaths.
- Neglect occurs more frequently than abuse
and can be equally damaging and deadly. 30% of all child fatalities are due to neglect.
- 11,927 children
spent some portion of 2005 in substitute (foster) care .
- Approximately 1,500 abused and neglected
children receive intensive, rehabilitative mential health services in residential programs.
- The
majority of children in residential care have been victims of significant physical or sexual abuse.
Please
Help the Children of Colorado so they too can enjoy beautiful music and enjoy the beautiful land.
Arvada
father charged with child abuse in infant's deathThe
Denver Post Posted: 08/26/2009 01:00:00 AM MDT Updated: 08/26/2009 01:50:48 AM MDT
The
father of a 2-month-old boy has been charged with child abuse resulting in death after the child died from head injuries,
the Arvada Police Department said Tuesday. The suspect is identified as Brandon Vaughn Yancey
Jr., who was arrested Saturday. According to a 15-page arrest warrant affidavit for Yancey, the child had: • Ruptured blood vessels in the area between the skull and brain. •
Bruising of the brain; both new and old rib fractures. • Bruising on the left and
right side of the head, both sides of the chest and on the buttocks. Police were called
to the 8100 block of Estes Court in Arvada on Aug. 10 after receiving a call that a child in the Yancey home was not breathing.
Based on a subsequent investigation and an autopsy conducted by the Jefferson County coroner's office, authorities believe
the child died from "abusive head trauma."
Infant in Lafayette child abuse case clings to lifePrevious arrest report shows father has history of showing his ‘temper’Tuesday, July 28,
2009 BOULDER, Colo. — A 2-month-old
infant who police say was shaken, smothered and bitten by his 26-year-old father is clinging to life at
Children’s Hospital, and detectives are continuing to build their case of abuse against Benjamin Koller. Koller, of Lafayette, is being held in lieu of a $1 million bond at the Boulder County Jail and is scheduled
to be charged Friday with felony child abuse resulting in serious bodily injury. Boulder County District Attorney Stan Garnett
said those charges could change if the baby, Jack Koller, dies. “On Friday, we will
make a decision about what charges are appropriate at that time,” Garnett said. “We are monitoring (Jack’s
condition) very closely.” Jack remained in critical condition at Children’s
Hospital in Aurora on Tuesday. Koller and his common-law wife, Jennifer Schmidt, 20, brought
their baby son to Avista Hospital in Louisville on July 21 with a skull fracture, multiple bruises and bite marks, according
to an arrest affidavit. Jack wasn’t responsive and was transported to Children’s Hospital, where doctors told
police that Jack has “considerable widespread brain damage.” Doctors said that
if the child lives, he “may never walk, talk or be able to feed himself,” according to the affidavit. Detectives are talking with Schmidt, and Garnett said they haven’t decided whether to arrest her in
connection with her son’s injuries. Legal analyst Scott Robinson said that in cases
when an infant is clinging to life and the parents might be charged, authorities can bring in an outside child advocate to
make important decisions regarding the child’s health and future. “But that
would require some kind of emergency hearing to appoint a guardian,” Robinson said. “You can’t strip parents
of their rights because they are accused of something.” Boulder County prosecutor
Colette Cribari, who has handled numerous child-abuse cases for the office, said that if injuries are inflicted over a period
of time — like in the Koller case — chances are greater that both parents will face charges. “It depends on how much (Schmidt) knew,” Cribari said. Koller
says on social-networking Web sites that he’s a student at
Boulder’s Naropa University. He’s worked at Blackjack Pizza in Boulder and the University of Colorado’s dining services,
according to CU and Boulder police reports. In August 2006, after working an evening shift
at Blackjack and then drinking margaritas at a friend’s house, police said, Koller walked through the Wendy’s
drive-through on 28th Street in Boulder about 1 a.m. and broke several windows when workers refused to serve him. An employee told Koller that they didn’t serve “walk-ups” and they were closed. But, the
police report said, he refused to leave and broke the drive-through window and other windows. He was arrested and later pleaded
guilty to criminal mischief. Koller was quoted in the arrest report as saying, “I
was upset and I made a bad decision.” He admitted to doing more damage than he thought “because of his temper,”
the report said. In September 2007, Koller was arrested again after his new employer, CU
dining services, ran a standard background check. During the background check, officers discovered that Koller had a warrant
out for his arrest. It was unclear Tuesday what that warrant alleged and whether it was related to his 2006 case. While arresting Koller in 2007, officers asked if he had any drugs on him. Koller said he didn’t, but
police reported finding marijuana in his backpack. Koller was ticketed for possession of marijuana. Boulder
County sheriff’s Cmdr. Bruce Haas said Koller is being held in the regular intake portion of the jail. Authorities will
monitor Koller to see if he needs special accommodations. “Oftentimes, people who
get media attention ask for that,” Haas said. Sirian Phillips, 24, said he attended
Naropa with Koller. “He seeks love and compassion and good relations with people,”
Phillips said. “He was a well-intentioned, kind-hearted, peaceful person.”
denver and the west Hearings
in Aarone's death start today in CentennialThe
Denver Post Posted: 06/16/2009 01:00:00 AM MDT Updated: 06/16/2009 01:13:45 AM MDT
The body of Aarone Thompson has never been found.
Court
hearings are scheduled to begin today for a man accused in the death of his young daughter. The motions hearings for
Aaron Thompson will be in Arapahoe County District Court in Centennial. Thompson was originally scheduled to stand trial this
week, but the trial was pushed back to Aug. 3. Authorities say Thompson is responsible for the death of his daughter,
Aarone, who would have been 6 years old when Thompson reported her missing in 2005. The girl's body has not been
found. Aurora police have said the girl might have been killed up to 18 months before Thompson reported her missing. Among
the charges against him are child abuse resulting in death; conspiracy to commit child abuse; accessory to a crime; false
reporting to authorities; abuse of a corpse; concealing a death; and multiple counts of child abuse resulting in injury.
5/7/2009
Man gets 16 years in child abuse case Rachel Alexander The Daily Record A man was sentenced to 16 years in the Department of Corrections Wednesday after pleading guilty to child
abuse causing serious bodily injury. Jeromy Pirraglia, 32, pleaded
guilty Feb. 25 to the crime, which, in 2007, left the 2-year-old son of his girlfriend with severe brain damage. Several people told District Court Judge David Thorson about the effects the incident had on the child, his
brother who was the only witness to the crime and the entire family. Lynn
Bacon Applegate became the foster mother to the injured child 17 months ago after he was released from the hospital. In order
to save his life, doctors had removed a hemisphere of his brain shortly after the incident. Applegate testified that the child now is legally blind, still has difficulty controlling the right side of
his body, has no pre-trauma memory and has lost the language center of his brain. However, he is now able to walk on his own
and is learning to speak. The boy turned 4 last Friday. “Where
he came from and to where he is now is nothing short of miraculous,” Applegate said. “My concern is that (the
boy) has a life sentence and so does his mother.” The
child’s mother, Monica Ellison, also testified about the effects of the incident on her family. “The reality is he is going to have this for the rest of his life,” she said. “He will never
be the child he was. There is no certainty of how he will grow up and who he will be.” She also said that the boy’s older brother now is afraid of men, and the word “daddy” scares
him. “Our family, for the rest of our lives, is changed
by this,” she said. “This will never be enough. At least this can give us some peace and some sense of justice.”
District Attorney Thom LeDoux said this type of crime is one
of the most difficult to prove, when the only witnesses or victims are too young or too injured to give clear testimony about
what took place. “This has been an extremely difficult
case to handle,” he said. “This is the only case that has brought me to tears.” Pirraglia’s defense attorney, Maggie Rosa, stated that her client was a “gentle giant.”
“I don’t know what happened there that day,”
she said. “I know that Mr. Pirraglia is not a monster.” Pirraglia
told the judge he would not have hurt the child intentionally. He claimed he had a seizure that day with the child. “I was more worried about him than myself,” Pirraglia said. “Anything I say today can’t
change anything. I feel like I could have prevented this accident.” Thorson
accepted the plea agreement and the stipulated sentence, but said it is extremely lenient. “I don’t believe for a minute that this was an accident,” Thorson said. “I don’t
believe for a minute your most recent explanations. This is a lenient plea agreement compared to the sentence you would have
gotten if you were convicted. You can’t cause more damage to a more helpless human being without it amounting to murder.”
Pirraglia was given 503 days of pre-sentence confinement credit.
Also Thursday, Thorson sentenced Joseph Dean Hamilton, 43, to
2 years to life in DOC. He had pleaded guilty to one count of Internet luring of a child Feb. 11. Hamilton had been charged as part of an Internet Crimes Against Children investigation. One count each of
enticement of a child, solicitation to commit sexual assault on a child by a person in a position of trust, conspiracy to
commit sexual assault on a child by a person in a position of trust, attempted sexual assault on a child, sexual exploitation
of children and sexual exploitation of a child will be dismissed as part of the agreement.
Ex-Palisade
cop convicted of child abuse
By LE ROY STANDISH/The Grand Junction Daily Sentinel
Wednesday, April 01, 2009 Former Palisade police officer Patrick Lee Casey was found guilty Wednesday by a jury of 27 counts of child
abuse. Casey, 51, could be sentenced to 90 years to life in prison when he returns
to court June 5. The case was given to the jury
for deliberation late Tuesday. By 10 a.m. Wednesday the jury had reached its conclusion. After
Casey’s conviction, in Judge Valerie Robison’s courtroom, his wife sat in the hallway, sobbing. Casey was convicted of molesting two foster children that were living in his home. The two girls, who were
ages 3 and 4 when the abuse started, were repeatedly abused from 1997 to 2008. Only
after the girls were away from Casey did they begin speaking about the abuse they were subjected to in the Casey household,
Palisade Police Chief Carroll Quarles said. Quarles was hired as chief of the
Palisade Police Department in 1995. Casey started working part-time for the department in 1988 and went full-time with the
department in 1994. Quarles said he first learned of the allegations against Casey
in January 2008. “It is very disturbing to me,” Quarles said. “I
think that everything that I have been taught and trained for over the years in terms of child abuse and sex assault have
come true here, because they always say it is those you least expect. And I would have never have suspected this man of being
involved in anything like that.” While one of the girls contacted the Fruita
police, the other contacted the Mesa County Sheriff’s Department, which took the lead in the investigation. Jeremy Savage, an assistant district attorney with the Mesa County District Attorney’s Office, said
he was satisfied with the verdict. “We are very pleased with the outcome
of this,” Savage said. “We believe justice was served on this case.”
Publish Date: 2/26/2009 Cañon City man, 32, pleads guilty to child abuse Pirraglia
accused of causing serious injuries to a 2-year-old boy Rachel Alexander The Daily Record A man accused of causing serious injury to a 2-year-old
boy pleaded guilty Wednesday. Jeromy Pirraglia, 32, pleaded guilty to knowingly and recklessly
causing serious bodily injury to a child. The plea agreement stipulates 16 years in the Department of Corrections followed
by five years of parole. Pirraglia had been scheduled for trial in mid-March. Had he been
convicted he would have faced up to 32 years in DOC, because the crime is considered “extraordinary risk.” The charge stems from an October 2007 incident that left the 2-year-old son of his live-in girlfriend with
a severe brain injury. That child’s brother, who was 4 at the time of the incident, was the only witness. Pirraglia and his girlfriend, Monica Ellison, were arrested in December 2007. Ellison was released later without
charges. On Oct. 17, 2007, emergency crews responded to a report that a 2-year-old boy
was not breathing. Ellison was reportedly at work while the boys were being watched by Pirraglia. Reports
indicate Pirraglia said the child collapsed and stopped breathing, but the 4-year-old told police Pirraglia “was mad”
and kicked his brother in the head. The child originally was taken to St. Thomas More Hospital, where he was diagnosed with
a skull fracture, then transported to Memorial Hospital in Colorado Springs for emergency surgery. During a preliminary hearing in September 2008, Dr. Paul Grabb, a pediatric
neurosurgeon who treated the boy, described his injuries. Grabb told the court the child
arrived at the hospital with bleeding and swelling in his brain. Grabb had to remove a portion of the child’s brain
to allow the brain to swell outward. Grabb compared
the injury to one suffered by a child who fell out of a two- or three-story window and hit his head on concrete below. He
said it could not have been self-inflicted or from simply falling down the stairs. The
injured boy and his brother were placed into foster care. Prior to the entry of the plea,
attorneys on both sides attempted to determine the competency of the injured child’s brother to testify at the trial.
District Judge David Thorson ordered a pre-sentence investigation report. Sentencing is
scheduled for April 8. Pirraglia remains in the Fremont County Jail.
Midyette guilty of lesser charge in infant's death02/17/2009 07:51:38 PM MST
Alex Midyette quickly wiped a few tears from his face after he was
found guilty of criminally negligent child abuse in the death of his 11-week-old son, Jason, by a Denver County
jury today. Midyette, 29, of Louisville could have been convicted of a more serious
charge of knowing and reckless child abuse resulting in death, which carries a prison term of 16 to 48 years. Midyette faces four to 16 years in prison when he is sentenced in the next couple of months.
He may also receive a probationary sentence. Jason's mother, Molly
Midyette, was sentenced last year to 16 years in prison after being convicted of a more serious felony of failing to get her
son medical attention. Defense lawyer Paul McCormick described his
client as "saddened" over the jury's decision. "We
would have been much happier with a not-guilty verdict," McCormick said. "It's a compromise." Jason Midyette had more than 30 broken bones and a skull fracture when he died on March
3, 2006. Alex Midyette's defense lawyers argued that the boy suffered from a metabolic
disease that weakened his bones. Prosecutors told jurors that Midyette was a frustrated
father who abused his son over the course of his short life, ultimately fracturing Jason's skull on a diaper changing
table. They also told jurors that Midyette failed to get medical care for his son as he
lay dying. Boulder County prosecutors Ken Kupfner and Colette Cribari declined to comment
on the verdict and said they would wait to make a statement until after Midyette is sentenced. Jurors
said they were split 9-3 on the more serious reckless and knowing child abuse charge because a few jurors believed that Jason
had a metabolic disease, and they refused to budge. But the jurors unanimously believed
that Midyette neglected to get his son to a doctor in time. Alex Midyette's case was
moved from Boulder to Denver because of a concern over pretrial publicity. The case garnered attention because Midyette
is the son of J. Nold Midyette, a prominent Boulder architect and commercial property owner. After
the verdict was read, Midyette took out his wallet and took off his necklace as sheriff's deputies put him in handcuffs.
Boulder County Judge Lael Montgomery doubled Midyette's bail to $1.5 million. Midyette
will remain in custody until he can post the amount. He and his parents did not make any
statements on their way out of the courtroom. McCormick says he plans to bring out his
client's positive attributes during sentencing and said Midyette conducted himself well during the trial. "We are grateful that the jury did not find him guilty on the major offense of inflicting injury,"
McCormick said. "It sounds like they faulted him for not getting to the hospital quick enough in his condition."
Jurors said they did not know until after the verdict about Molly Midyette's conviction
and sentence. Juror Justin Kaufmann said his fellow jurors were "shocked" that
Molly Midyette was in prison and assumed during deliberations that she was dead because they were not given any information
about her during the trial. Juror Angela Wainwright said she believes that Alex Midyette
should get the same amount of time in prison as his wife. "I think he definitely
deserves the same," Wainwright said. "I think they are both responsible."
Defend comments
WHERE IS THE JUSTICE++A BABY IS DEAD AND HE MIGHT GET PROBATION> THE MOTHER GETS $ TIMES THE SENTENCE THIS RICH MAN"S
SON GETS>
Lamar Roberts sentenced to 36 years in Zoe Garcia death Posted
on Friday, January 16 @ 23:24:46 CST by admin
By Matt Lubich The Johnstown Breeze
GREELEY -- The stories of two lives lived in chaos as the result of parental neglect
and substance abuse spun together in a tragic tableau Friday afternoon, as lawyers pled for leniency for a young man and asked
a Weld County Court judge to remember the life of a little girl cut short at his hands. Lamar
Roberts, 18, was sentenced to 36 years in prison by Judge Marcelo Kopcow for the December 2007 beating death of 7-year-old
Zoe Garcia. The sentence also carries a mandatory five years on parole when Roberts is released. Roberts
pled guilty last month to a charge of child abuse causing death. He showed little emotion during the two-hour hearing Friday
afternoon, but put his head against the wall when Kopcow announced the sentence. The judge could have sentenced him to anywhere
between as little as 16 years and as many as 48 years in the case. As he was led from
the courtroom by deputies, friends and family of Roberts called out to him, saying: “We love you Lamar” and “stay
strong.” He did not look back.
Just before midnight Dec. 6,
2007, police and fire department personnel responded to a home in the 500 block of Charlotte St. in Johnstown on
a 911 call regarding a report of a young girl not breathing. Garcia, a first-grader at Letford Elementary School, was taken
to North Colorado Medical Center in Greeley, where she was pronounced dead. An autopsy showed her right wrist was broken,
and there were “more than 20 bruises counted on the victim’s body” as well as other injuries. Cause of death
was attributed to “blunt force injuries.” Roberts and his 16-year-old girlfriend,
Heather Trujillo, were arrested and both charged as adults in the case. Roberts, from the Denver area, lived at the Charlotte
home with Trujillo and her family, which included Garcia, 3-year-old twin sisters, and the girls’ mother Dana Trujillo.
Heather Trujillo told police she and Roberts had been watching the girls and she had been
wrestling with Zoe. According to the arrest affidavit, Trujillo told police Roberts was present but not participating in the
wrestling; acting as “referee.” Police alleged, however, that in subsequent
conversations, Roberts told others he was wrestling with the girl as well, and that at one point he kicked her and she didn’t
get back up. He also admitted he had been drinking. Police also interviewed witnesses who said they had allegedly seen Roberts
hit the little girl on prior occasions. If he had gone to trial, Roberts would have also faced testimony that he bragged to
a friend that his hands were “lethal weapons.” At the sentencing hearing Friday,
friends and family of Roberts talked of a much different young man than the one who sat in front of them in the courtroom
shackled, wearing an orange jail jumpsuit, and headed to prison. They admitted Roberts
grew up in less than perfect circumstances -- his mother was an alcoholic and his brother died when Roberts was 11. They even
agreed that maybe he was living in Johnstown with Trujillo as a way to get away from that home life. But they also talked
about a young man who took care of his mother and others in the family. They told of the time he took blankets to neighbors
whose heat was off, how he gave away his new snow shoes to some kid down the block who only had tennis shoes, and how he once
wanted to sponsor a child in Africa “with my allowance.” And they talked of
a teen-ager who they said loved Zoe, and who was trying to take care of her and her sisters. A boy thrust into a man’s
role, using what money he could make to buy food for the family, and who often asked them for help to buy diapers. Robb Miller of the Weld County District Attorney’s Office told the judge none of this was an excuse
for “abusing a seven-year-old child to death.” Life for Zoe was much worse
than anything Roberts had experienced, Miller said. At seven, with the two teens basically parenting the younger children,
Zoe had already learned to smoke cigarettes and marijuana. A report released by the Colorado Department of Human Services
-- investigating Weld County Social Services which was in the Johnstown household where Zoe Garcia lived on several occasions
in the months prior to her death investigating reports of concerns of abuse -- detailed a “chaotic” and “dangerous”
living situation that Dana Trujillo had little control over or involvement in. “It’s
clear that Zoe’s short life was far more chaotic and neglectful than his was,” Miller said. “We’ve
heard this referred to as an accident, and it clearly wasn’t. It was brutal treatment of a seven-year-old that led to
her death. This went far beyond horseplay and poor judgment to brutality. “The focus
needs to be on Zoe Garcia,” Miller said. “I deserve what I get,” Roberts
said when asked by Judge Kopcow if he wanted to make a statement before sentencing. “I’m
truly sorry for what happened. I looked at Zoe like my little sister,” he said. “There are days when I sit in
jail and want to trade places with her. She had so much to live for, but I have a lot to live for too.” “Mr. Roberts did have potential and does have potential,” Judge Kopcow said before passing sentence.
“He didn’t have the environment many of us had when we were growing up. His life was in chaos and he didn’t
have the childhood he deserved. “But he is responsible for his actions, and must
pay the consequences of those actions. Zoe suffered a brutal, cruel and painful death.” Heather
Trujillo was sentenced in July to 18 years in prison for her part in the death, having made a deal that called for her to
plead guilty to a slightly lesser child abuse charge, and also agree to testify against Roberts at his trial. Kopcow, who also heard that case, suspended the prison sentence on the condition Trujillo successfully completes
six years in the Youthful Offender System in Pueblo. For more on this story, pick
up Thursday’s issue of The Johnstown Breeze.
Third Case Of Suspected
Child Abuse In Two Weeks
Updated: Feb 2, 2009 10:34 AM EST By Patti Moon p.moon@krdo.com COLORADO SPRINGS - A one-month-old boy, Enzo Dingman, is in critical condition from suspected
child abuse. The boy is being treated for brain bleed at Memorial Hospital. Bryan Dingman,
24, is the father who was arrested for felony child abuse at 3414 Vera Cruz Court Monday afternoon. El
Paso County Department of Human Services officials say the problem of child abuse is growing and must be addressed. Shirley Rhodus is head of Child Protective Services for El Paso County. She says there are many parents who
just need some assistance. "We can help identify what the problems are, what the stressors
are," Rhodus said. "We can help provide pay for treatment to help parents recover." Rhodus
says one of the best resources for parents is KPC Kids' Place. She says the free day-care center is ideal for parents
who need a break. "A couple hours, it can even be a couple days, so they really do
provide emergency respite daycare," Rhodus said. El Paso County Human Services also
has a Child Abuse & Neglect Hotline. Rhodus says anyone should call or e-mail if they suspect a child is being abused
or neglected. The hotline's phone number is 444-5700. The e-mail address is childabusereport@elpasoco.com. For more information on KPC Kids' Place, click here.
Lakewood police officer was about to be arrested, say copsby Ginger Delgado | News2
- July 1, 2008
COMMERCE CITY (KWGN)
- A Lakewood cop who was found dead in a murder-suicide was about to be arrested for allegedly abusing
his three-month old daughter, according to Commerce City police. William O'Shell and his wife, Tiffany O'Shell, who
was a former Lakewood police officer, were found shot to death inside their home Monday night on the 11500 block of River
Run Parkway in Commerce City. Police say it was 6:15 p.m. on Monday when they first got the call about two people dead
inside the home. The call came from Tiffany's mother.
Tiffany O'Shell was hired by the Lakewod Police in 2006, but resigned a year later. O'Shell
was a Lakewood police officer hired in 2005 and assigned to the patrol division.
At a news conference in Commerce
City on Tuesday, police made a stunning announcement: William O'Shell was the prime suspect in a child abuse case involving
his own 3-month-old daughter. Sgt. Joe Sandoval told reporters, "The child suffered what we consider to be serious bodily
injury. It was nothing life threatening, but serious enough to where it involved fractures, breaks and things of that nature."
Sandoval says it was June 17th when the couple first brought the baby to a hospital. "Our investigators responded
directly to the hospital to start interviewing doctors and family members who were there to try to make their determination
about who had cared for the child, " he said.
The investigation focused on four people: William O'Shell,
Tiffany O'Shell and two relatives who had cared for the baby. But soon, everyone but William was ruled out as a suspect
and police say they were just about ready to make the arrest. "The case was being built. We were getting very close to
presenting the case to the D.A.'s office," said Sandoval.
Now, instead of a child abuse case, police are
investigating a murder-suicide, and they say until the autopsy is completed, they still don't know who killed who.
Police say the couple's baby is expected to make a full recovery from her injuries. She is now in a foster home
and in the custody of Adams County Social Services.
| Posted: 5:26 PM Feb 29, 2008 Last Updated: 7:12 PM Feb 29, 2008 Reporter: KKCO
| |
|
| A Grand Junction man is behind bars accused of sexually molesting his own daughter. NBC
11 News has chosen not to release the suspects name in order to protect the young victim in this case. According to
the Mesa County Sheriff's Office, when deputies when to arrest the man he ran from them and tried to commit suicide by
swallowing pills. An arrest affidavit shows the 42-year-old had been sexually molesting and raping his daughter since
she was seven years old. The most recent attack happened two weeks ago. The man is facing eight felony charges including
two counts of aggravated incest and one count sexual assault on a child by way of force. He's being held at the
Mesa County Jail on a $100,000 bond. He'll be back in court in early March for a formal filing of charges |
|
Father Arrested in Child Abuse of 2 Young Children By For News Release questions, please contact our PIO
| On August 16th, the Colorado Springs Police Department was
notified by Memorial Hospital that a 4 month old baby boy had been transported to the hospital from the 6700 block of Dublin
Loop. It was determined that the baby had a subdural hematoma which would have occurred within the last day. In addition,
the baby had some other bruising on the front and back. The child was then transported to Denver Children’s Hospital.
At Children’s Hospital, it was determined that there appeared to be both
new and older subdurals in this child. They advised that this was non-accidental trauma. At this time, it was requested that
the other two children be transported to Children’s Hospital for a child abuse assessment. A 4 month old female that is a twin to the above child, along with a 17 month old male baby were evaluated
and it was determined that the older child was fine, however, the 4 month old female was found to have multiple fractures-in
excess of 20 that were to both arms, legs, and torso area. These fractures were all healing and could have occurred anywhere
from one to three weeks ago. The two twins are 4 months old and were born 6 weeks premature. The babies weigh approximately
7 lbs. at 4 months. Through the course of the investigation, an Arrest
Warrant was obtained for the father of the children. He has been identified as Bradley Jason Vincent, a 25 year old white
male. The Warrant charges him with 2 counts of Child Abuse, a class 3 Felony. The Arrest Warrant was signed this morning and
Bradley Vincent turned himself into the El Paso County Criminal Justice Center at approximately 3:00 p.m. this afternoon.
+++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++ |
January 20th, 2008
For a year, Lora Lee Hansen-Beard, 41, of Boulder, Colorado, would leave her eight-year-old daughter every Saturday
night with a 47-year-old man, Joseph Cardillo, 47.
If you read the story in the newspaper, you’ll see that Hanswen Beard was a complete and total nut. She is charged with two misdemeanor counts of child abuse
for placing the girl in a life- or health-threatening situation.
That’s it? As usual, the Boulder DA is doing a great job…not.
Authorities found out about the abuse after the girl’s teachers reported that she often showed up late to school,
unfed and wearing dirty clothes. Her teachers say that the girl cried all the time and was unable to focus on her work.
The girl told police that she and Cardillo slept naked in the same bed, would bathe together, and went in the hot
tub naked.
Cardillo is charged with sexual assault. He’s accused of using a sex toy on the girl and drinking her urine.
If convicted, he faces a possible life sentence in prison if convicted on charges of sex assault on a child by a person in
position of trust and a pattern of assaulting the girl. He’s free on a $100,000 bond.
6 months
ago DENVER – The father of a 10-year-old
girl killed in a shooting is scheduled to appear in court Wednesday on charges of child abuse resulting in death. Denver
Police said they arrested 29-year-old Leo Cisneros on Tuesday. He is scheduled to appear at noon. His
daughter, Auralia Cisneros, was killed during a shootout in their home on Nov. 26. Police
have said three men came to the home to rob Leo Cisneros and Auralia was killed during the confrontation. The DA's office
charged Trivi Trujillo, Joshua Rojas and Juvenico Hernandez, all 19, in her death. They also charged 22-year-old Manuel Talamantes
with felony murder and as an accessory to the crime. Police would not release details
on why Leo Cisneros was charged on Tuesday, but would only say they have "developed sufficient
information to arrest" him. "What we found through our investigation, we felt
that his actions that took place that night, those charges were warranted," said Sonny Jackson, spokesperson for the
Denver Police Department. "The gist of these charges is that the father of the slain
girl acted knowingly and recklessly in allowing his child to be placed in a position that was dangerous to her life or health,"
said 9NEWS legal analyst Scott Robinson. Auralia's mother was also in the home when
the shooting happened but she does not face any charges at this point. "The police
believe at least that the father was up to no good," said Robinson. "There are a number of scenarios that explain
the charges; could be drug business, gang affairs, could even be placing the child into the crossfire." According to the coroner's report, Auralia was sitting with her father when the shootout began. It says
she was found with "a small bag of green, leafy material clutched in her left hand." Despite
pictures on the family's MySpace page that appear to show gang signs, a gun and Leo Cisneros' criminal history of
drug possession, the family has insisted the shooting was random. 9NEWS attempted to contact
the family, but they did not return any phone calls on Tuesday. The police and the coroner's
office have never clarified which gun the bullet that killed Auralia came from – one of the alleged robbers or Leo Cisneros'.
Robinson says if the bullet came from Leo Cisneros he would also face charges of reckless manslaughter, not just child abuse.
The Denver District Attorney's office will now decide which charges will be formally
filed. |
| Rest in Peace |

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| Jason |
Dad arrested in stabbing of 2 kids - Colorado
Springs father was arrested Monday on suspicion of trying to kill his young son and daughter last week in what police said
was an attempted murder-suicide.
Matthew Valverde, 44, is accused of stabbing his 4-year-old
son, 5-yearold daughter and himself at their Stratton Meadows home in the 1200 block of Norwood Avenue off East Cheyenne Road
on the city's south side. All three were hospitalized Thursday with serious but nonlifeing
injuries, Colorado Springs police said. The children had been released by Monday. Valverde remained at Memorial Hospital in fair condition. Once released, he'll be jailed on suspicion
of two counts of attempted firstgree murder, police said.
Detective Payton Patterson described the stabbings as an unsuccessful murdersuicide but said
investigators found no suicide note. It's unclear when the stabbings occurred. Officers found Valverde and the children covered in blood about 7:10 a.m. Thursday in a bedroom. All three were on the bed. Valverde was unconscious, but the children were not. Police
came to the house after the children's mother arrived to pick them up. When no one answered the door, she called 911 to
ask officers to check inside. Copyright 2006 Provided by ProQuest Information and Learning Company. All rights Reserved.
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