Waterboarding Mother Sentenced to 78 Years

tay

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May 20, 2012
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A St. Louis woman was sentenced Friday to 78 years in prison after admitting to beating, whipping and waterboarding her children in a prolonged pattern of abuse that prosecutors described as "systematic torture."

Lakechia Schonta Stanley, 34, of St. Louis, faced 34 felonies, including multiple counts of assault and endangering the welfare of a child, for the abuse which was reported to a school librarian in October 2011.

One of the children, then 10 years old, had gone to school complaining of severe pain in her arm. Prosecutors say the girl revealed Stanley had beaten her with a baseball bat because she had not cleaned the kitchen quickly enough. The girl told the librarian that her sister, then age 8, was also beaten with a bat because she had taken too long to shower.

When the librarian examined the girl's arm she found it cold and hard to the touch, according to prosecutors. The girl was treated at the hospital, where it was determined that her arm had been subjected to such trauma that the blood supply to the limb was restricted.

According to prosecutors, interviews with the girls revealed prolonged abuse in which they had been waterboarded, whipped with electrical cords, forced into scalding or freezing showers, and beaten with an array of blunt objects. Further investigation revealed significant scarring on all three of the women's children, prosecutors said, and even worse emotional trauma.

"What the defendant did to three of her own children far exceeds the definition of child abuse and amounts to systematic torture," assistant circuit attorney Tanja Engelhardt wrote in a sentencing memorandum for the judge. "She was supposed to be their mother, the one person they could trust. Instead she became a symbol of betrayal and fear, using every tool at her disposal to beat and torture her own innocent children."

The woman's husband, Andrew Rui Stanley, 30, pleaded guilty last year to 42 felony counts on related charges, plus submitted Alford pleas on additional counts. He was sentenced to 160 years in prison. The couple lived in the 3800 block of Botanical Avenue.


St. Louis woman sentenced 78 years in prison for waterboarding her children : News

http://www.stltoday.com/news/local/...cle_078697bb-8a60-5998-9f77-0a559e180325.html
 

Sal

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Sep 29, 2007
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how do you even begin to repair that?

those kids are lucky to be alive, and might not have been for much longer
 

Sal

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Sep 29, 2007
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Well, first you call it "enhanced interrogation techniques. . ."
*coffee choke*

LMFAO....

thanks for the levity, that was awesome

sometimes just for a minute I can feel that cavewomen mentality seeping through and I wanna use that club on people such as those above, use it repeatedly and heavily
 

WLDB

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Jun 24, 2011
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how do you even begin to repair that?

The physical problems will likely heal fairly quickly. The emotional ones - probably never. I don't think something like that can ever really be fixed. They'll need a lot of help to be able to get past this and have a chance at a normal life going forward.
 

Sal

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Sep 29, 2007
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The physical problems will likely heal fairly quickly. The emotional ones - probably never. I don't think something like that can ever really be fixed. They'll need a lot of help to be able to get past this and have a chance at a normal life going forward.

hopefully at the very least the cycle will be broken

at some point we all reach a state of awareness of right and wrong...some take longer than others yes...I am most certain that woman has some horrendous background, but it just can't be an excuse, one has to realize their behaviour is beyond cruel, beyond normal, beyond even abuse to the point of torture

I have wondered a lot over the years why some individuals, just "get it" and never repeat that behaviour which was perpetrated upon them and why others not only perpetuate it, they escalate it to a whole new level

what is that line and why do some draw it and others not

and there are varying degrees too...a father will beat a kid to a pulp, and that kid has a kid and they do it to a lesser degree and so forth until it makes it way to "normal" and I am not saying normal is the standard to set, only that things improve in some family lines, others don't
 

spaminator

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