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Banita Jacks had a secret in her upstairs bedrooms,
a secret so terrible that she spent most of 2007 trying to convince
the world that she had moved away from her Southeast Washington home,
a federal prosecutor said yesterday. For months, the prosecutor told a
judge, Jacks kept her blinds drawn, let mail pile up outside the
house, stopped paying bills and left by the back door.
"Her secret was the rotting bodies of her
daughters. And that secret unraveled when the marshals arrived on Jan.
9, 2008," Assistant U.S. Attorney Deborah Sines said in her opening
statement at Jacks's murder trial in D.C. Superior Court.
When the federal marshals, who were there to serve
an eviction notice, forced their way into the rented rowhouse, they
found the bodies of Jacks's four daughters -- Brittany Jacks, 16,
Tatianna Jacks, 11, N'Kiah Fogle, 6, and Aja Fogle, 5 -- in two
upstairs bedrooms. Jacks said the girls had died in their sleep.
In the defense's 20-minute opening statement, one
of her public defenders, Lloyd Nolan, said that although his client
lived in the house, she was "completely innocent" of killing the
girls. "This was a tragic event," Nolan said. "But Ms. Jacks was in no
way responsible for the death of her children."
Nolan said the only evidence linking Jacks to the
girls' deaths was that she was at home when the marshals arrived.
Nolan said that no witness saw or overheard Jacks kill her children
and that no scientific evidence linked her to their deaths.
Judge Frederick H. Weisberg will decide the case
because Jacks has waived her right to a jury trial. She is charged
with 12 counts, including premeditated first-degree murder and cruelty
to children. Because of the ages of the victims, Jacks, who rejected
an insanity defense, faces life in prison without parole.
The bodies were so badly decayed, Sines said, that
prosecutors had to consult with four medical examiners, including one
from the Department of Defense, FBI specialists and a forensic
anthropologist to determine the causes of death. Eventually,
authorities declared that Brittany had suffered puncture wounds to her
abdomen, Aja had been strangled and beaten, and the two other girls
had been strangled.
Nolan disputed the prosecution's assertions about
the causes of death, saying the bodies were too badly decomposed to
make a determination of cause or time.
During Sines's opening statement, Jacks, 35,
dressed in a navy-blue prison jumpsuit, often shook her head and
pursed her lips. But she kept her eyes forward, away from Sines. As
was the case at earlier hearings, Jacks was an active participant in
her defense. She wrote notes or used a yellow highlighter to
communicate with her attorneys, who sometimes whispered to ask whether
she had additional questions.
Sines spent most of her opening describing the
girls' bodies and the home. All furniture, food and other household
staples were gone, she said. In one bedroom, the bodies of the three
youngest sisters, each dressed in a white T-shirt, were lined up in
order of age. A "couple pairs of tiny flip-flops" were the only other
things in the room, she said.
Sines said medical examiners determined that
Brittany was killed first. Brittany's nude body was found in a pool of
blood in another bedroom. A T-shirt had been placed over it. Sines
said the decomposed body was "melting into the floor."
Sines said it appeared that Brittany had been held
hostage in the room because the door was locked from outside with a
key that Jacks kept on top of the door frame. A bedsheet covered a
bedroom window that overlooked an alley. Feces and urine were found in
the closet.
"She wouldn't even allow her own teenager out to
use a bathroom," Sines said of Jacks.
The prosecutor said she plans to call as witnesses
relatives, friends, the children's godparents, social workers and
neighbors who will testify that Jacks verbally abused Brittany or that
she withheld food from the children as punishment. Sines said one of
Jacks's friends even drafted a custody agreement, hoping to take
Brittany out of Jacks's home.
Authorities say they think Jacks began isolating
her children from friends and family as early as April 2007, when she
had Brittany's cellphone disconnected. "By April 3, no one talked to
Brittany again," Sines said. Then, through the summer, neighbors saw
three, then two, then one child outside with Jacks.
Before the trial began, Weisberg spent three days
watching eight hours of videotape of Jacks being interrogated by D.C.
detectives. During the interviews, Jacks spoke of her children as
"having demons" and referred to herself as Mary Magdalene and to her
dead boyfriend as Jesus Christ. Weisberg ruled that the videos could
be used in the trial.
The first witness was Deputy U.S. Marshal Nicholas
Garrett, who was assigned to carry out the Jan. 9 eviction. Garrett
said Jacks answered the door wearing only a white T-shirt and a white
head covering. She spat on the ground and wouldn't let him and the
other marshals in, he said. After the marshals pushed the door open,
Garrett said, he had to cover his face because of the stench.
"It smelled like rotting meat, like stink bait," he
said. "I just thought it was rotten or spoiled food." After finding
the bodies, the marshals ordered Jacks out of the house and handcuffed
her.
Details of Banita Jacks's Relationship With
Eldest Daughter Emerge