• Palmdale parents sentenced to potential life terms for torture, murder

    From Bill Pfister@21:1/5 to All on Thu May 2 13:24:59 2024
    XPost: ca.politics, alt.fan.rush-limbaugh, talk.politics.guns
    XPost: sac.politics, or.politics

    The parents of 4-year-old Noah Cuatro were sentenced to potential prison
    terms Tuesday for the July 2019 murder and torturing of the Palmdale boy.

    Jose Maria Cuatro Jr., 32, was sentenced to 32 years to life in prison,
    while Ursula Elaine Juarez, 30, received 22 years to life for Noah's
    death, which was initially reported as a drowning in the family's
    apartment pool.

    Supervisor Kathryn Barger responded to the sentencing, saying she would
    have liked harsher terms for both parents.

    "Life sentences without the possibility of parole would have been most appropriate, in my opinion, but I respect the judicial and sentencing
    process," Barger said.

    On March 29, Cuatro pleaded no contest to one count each of first-degree
    murder and torture, and Juarez pleaded no contest to one count each of second-degree murder and torture.

    As part of their plea deal, both defendants waived their appellate rights.

    Around 4 p.m. on July 5, 2019, the couple reported a drowning in their apartment pool. They claimed Noah had been swimming in the pool and
    stopped breathing. Suspicion grew when paramedics arrived and found Noah unconscious and dry in the family apartment.

    The boy was taken first to Palmdale Regional Medical Center and then to Children's Hospital Los Angeles, where he was pronounced dead the next day.

    Hospital staff reported founding signs of trauma on Noah's body and
    determined there were issues with his parents' explanation for his cause
    of death.

    One week later, a Sheriff's department investigation was underway into
    the boy's death. Noah's three siblings were taken into protective custody.

    Two months prior to his death, there was a court order to remove Noah
    from his parents' custody over concerns of abuse, but he never was.

    The boy's great-grandmother, Evangelina Hernandez, subsequently filed a wrongful death lawsuit against Los Angeles County on behalf of herself
    and the boy's sister and two brothers, alleging that his death occurred
    after multiple reports of abuse had already been made to the Department
    of Children and Family Services.

    "Instead of protecting Noah and his siblings, DCFS continued to place
    the children with their abusive parents, where the children continued to
    be abused over the course of several years," the suit alleges.

    After Noah's death, DCFS social workers made threats against Hernandez
    "in an attempt to silence her," the lawsuit alleges.

    The social workers told Hernandez that if she made any public statements
    about Noah's case and/or potential lawsuits, she would lose her request
    for guardianship of her other three great-grandchildren and would never
    see them again, the suit states.

    The DCFS previously issued a statement regarding Noah's death. "At any
    given time, the Department of Children and Family Services serves more
    than 34,000 families and vulnerable children in Los Angeles County with
    an unwavering commitment to pursue child safety every day in our
    communities," the statement read. "Our 9,000 employees are committed to
    this mission, and we look to do everything possible to safeguard the
    children entrusted to our care."

    https://www.cbsnews.com/losangeles/news/palmdale-parents-sentenced-to-potential-life-terms-for-torture-murder-of-4-year-old-son/?intcid=CNR-02-0623

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