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Hope
Tomahawk WHITESHIELD
FoxNews.com
November 06, 2013
FARGO, N.D. – A Spirit Lake Indian Reservation
woman who was awarded custody of infant twin girls despite a
history of child neglect was sentenced Wednesday to 30 years in
prison in the death of one of the children, who was thrown down an
embankment.
Hope Louise Tomahawk Whiteshield pleaded guilty
in July to federal charges of child abuse and witness tampering in
the June death of her step-granddaughter, who was just shy of 3
years old.
The case was one of several held up by U.S.
authorities to show the ineffectiveness of the Spirit Lake tribe's
child protection system. The federal Bureau of Indian Affairs took
over control of the tribe's child social services more than a year
ago.
An autopsy showed the girl died of a head
injury. Authorities said that after the incident, Tomahawk
Whiteshield bathed the unresponsive child, dressed her in pajamas
and put her to bed. The 32-year-old woman then told other children
in her household not to report what happened and went to sleep,
prosecutors said.
U.S. District Judge Ralph Erickson said that
while killing the child was "horrible beyond words," the ensuing
cover-up was the deciding factor in sentencing.
"The fact that no one sought help for this
child is unfathomable," Erickson said.
Assistant U.S Attorney Janice Morley said
Tomahawk Whiteshield had been charged for child neglect offenses
eight times in tribal court, including one case in which a
3-year-old was found wandering along a busy highway after Tomahawk
Whiteshield forced the child to get out of her vehicle.
Jeanine Kersey-Russell, a foster parent who had
custody of the twins for more than a year, said the tribe stepped
in and said the girls would be better off staying with family.
They were 26 months old when they were placed with Tomahawk
Whiteshield, who lived in the town of St. Michael on the North
Dakota reservation.
"We will live the rest of our lives wishing
there was something we could have done to keep them safe," she
testified Wednesday.
Kersey-Russell said the surviving twin talks
about her sister often and has a vivid memory of Tomahawk
Whiteshield throwing the victim "down in the mud."
Tomahawk Whiteshield declined to speak at the
hearing. She wept as defense attorney Richard Henderson argued for
a 25-year prison term, and the lawyer placed his hands on her
shoulders.
Henderson said his client "knows she is
responsible" for the child's death and is "very, very sorry," but
that social services should never have left the twins in her care.
There were five other children in the household.
Erickson said the tribal agency's role was not
a subject for the sentencing hearing.
U.S. Attorney Timothy Purdon said the sentence
was appropriate.
"Hopefully the stiff sentence imposed today
will provide some measure of justice to her family," Purdon said.
By Blake Nicholson - Associated Press
June 21, 2013
BISMARCK, N.D. — Federal authorities
have charged a woman in the death of a toddler on the Spirit Lake
Reservation, where the effectiveness of the child protection
system has been the subject of debate for more than a year.
Hope Tomahawk Whiteshield, 31, of St.
Michael, is charged with child abuse and neglect, a charge that
carries a mandatory minimum sentence of 10 years in prison and a
maximum punishment of 20 years upon conviction. She made her
initial court appearance on Thursday in U.S. District Court in
Grand Forks and has a detention hearing scheduled Monday.
Her court-appointed defense attorney,
Ted Sandberg, said she plans to plead not guilty.
Whiteshield is charged in the June 12
or June 13 death of a girl who was a month shy of 3 years old. FBI
Special Agent Michael Meyer said in an affidavit that Whiteshield
is married to the child's grandfather, Freeman Whiteshield.
Tomahawk Whiteshield is accused of
throwing the girl down an embankment by the family's home on June
12, then bathing and clothing the unresponsive child and putting
her to bed. The girl was found dead the next morning. An autopsy
concluded that she died of a head injury.
"The medical examiner advised the
agents that this type of injury would not be caused by normal day
to day activities of a child her age, i.e. bumping her head or
rolling off her bed," Meyer said in his affidavit.
The agent said that when
investigators asked Tomahawk Whiteshield why she had pushed the
girl and the girl's twin sister, Tomahawk Whiteshield replied that
she "was getting depressed about having kids all the time."
Sandberg declined to comment on the
alleged statement.
The two girls had been with a foster
family in Bismarck for two years and were transferred back to the
reservation about a month before the incident, according to Meyer.
The safety of vulnerable children on
the reservation has been questioned for months. The federal Bureau
of Indian Affairs took over the tribe's child protection services
last October following repeated criticism that the tribe's efforts
to stem child abuse and neglect were failing. The criticism began
to mount after the May 2011 slaying of a 6-year-old and his
9-year-old sister, who authorities say had been sexually
assaulted.
North Dakota's U.S. senators, John
Hoeven and Heidi Heitkamp, earlier this week called for quick
action by authorities in the death of the St. Michael girl.
U.S. Attorney Timothy Purdon said in
a statement that "the protection of children is a top priority for
my office, and we are doing everything possible to thoroughly and
deliberately investigate this matter."