Murder of Nixzmary Brown
Nixzmary Brown (July 18, 1998 – January 11,
2006) was a seven-year-old abused child and murder victim from the
Bedford-Stuyvesant, Brooklyn section of New York City, New York. Her
death impacted the city's Administration for Children's Services and
prompted reforms in the system.
Brown's murder
Brown endured torture, and was later learned to
have been bound, molested and beaten and killed by her stepfather,
César Rodriguez in a spate of rage that began over a cup of yogurt and
a broken printer that he claimed was her fault. Her stepfather, quoted
in an article published in USA today, called her a
"troublemaker".
On the night of Wednesday, January 10, 2006,
Rodriguez beat Brown to death with both fists and his thick leather
belt. Her mother, Nixzaliz Santiago, ignored Rodriguez as he slammed
Brown's head into a bathtub and doused her with cold water. Both
Santiago and Rodriguez were charged with second-degree murder and
child endangerment.
Rodriguez was convicted on verdict of first-degree
manslaughter and other charges, and was sentenced 29 years in prison.
Rodriguez and Santiago each accused the other of inflicting the final,
fatal blow. Traces of Brown's DNA was found on Rodriguez's belt. The
indictment also alleged that Rodriguez abused the little girl for
months and smashed her head against a bathtub.
Previous abuse, and failure of the Administration for Children's
Services (ACS)
Initial complaints in Brown's case
Evidence of previous abuse inflicted on Brown came
to light, and the news coverage of her murder case later drew public
attention on New York City's Administration for Children's Services
(ACS). ACS had received two complaints about Brown's family. The
first, made 2004, remained unsubstantiated. The second complaint was
made on December 1, 2004 when Brown showed up at school with a black
eye. Another story in January 2006 brought more details of the ACS
involvement. Blame was eventually assigned to the ACS by the news
media and six Children's Services employees were disciplined. There
were also stories that investigators were "swamped" with cases and the
Bloomberg administration noted that the ACS was responding by hiring
525 more workers.
Mayor Michael Bloomberg creates a City Panel in response
In March, 2006, a City panel was created by Mayor
Bloomberg in response to Brown's death, advocated the following
changes:
"Under the changes, the police for the first
time will assign a full-time supervisor, a lieutenant, to child
welfare headquarters to be a liaison between the two agencies.
Caseworkers will be required to seek entry orders when denied access
to the home of a child suspected to be at risk of neglect or abuse.
And school officials will have more license to alert the authorities
when a student has too many unexplained absences."
Other changes were recommended as well, some of
which included better communication with school officials regarding
absenteeism, a 24-hour hotline, instant-response teams and new
training for police personnel regarding sensitivity to abused
children.
Funeral, burial and family anger
Nixzmary Brown's funeral was held at St. Mary
Church on Manhattan's Lower East Side. According to a Newsday report,
there was considerable anger during the burial of Nixzmary Brown, with
two sides of Brown's family present. Rodriguez's sister, Iris, showed
up unexpectedly and her appearance prompted shouts by others to leave,
and at least one comment of 'not being welcome'.
Nixzmary's Law
"Nixzmary's Law" was proposed in
January 2006 by New York State senator Joseph Bruno, shortly after the
events. The law is designed to deter or prevent child abuse related
crimes by charging parents connected to the crime of the death of
their children with first degree murder, the maximum punishment for
which in New York State would be 25 years to life in prison without
the possibility of parole.
Since passing of the law, reports have increased to
New York States' child abuse hotline. According to the article, "Driving
the trend is increased public awareness of the hotline . . .". The
article further provided the telephone number of New York's Central
Register of Child Abuse and Mistreatment as (800) 342-3720.
Legislation in the form of a Bill sent to New York
Governor Paterson has been approved by the state’s Senate to target
those individuals who have killed a child, especially in a “cruel and
wanton manner”.
One of the legislators, Senator Ruben Diaz Sr., a
Democrat from the Bronx, has said:
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"We have to send a message that this kind of
abuse of children has to stop."
The Daily News article said that the murder case
was a “shakeup of the city's Administration for Children's Services".
Aftermath
New York City Council becomes involved with ACS
There was a City Council hearing on the ACS in
September, 2007, announced by Councilman Bill de Blasio, the chairman
of the General Welfare Committee, which Committee has jurisdiction
over the ACS. de Blasio cited the death of 21-month-old Hailey
Gonzalez after she was allegedly beaten by her mother's boyfriend and
the death of a 2-month-old after the child was allegedly shaken by his
mother in a homeless shelter. The Councilman said that ACS has made
some progress but noted that children were still being lost.
Former ACS Supervisor discusses their failure
On January 13, a former ACS supervisor, Roger
Moore, came forward to discuss with the New York Daily News the
failure of the ACS and how opportunities were lost because of another
child-murder involving a 16-month old boy and other factors. Moore
discussed that because of the issue of the drowning of the little boy
in a bathtub, the issue of Brown wasn't even discussed. There were
discussions of a lack of follow-up work not being done by caseworkers
and supervisors in Brooklyn regarding the abuse in Brown's case. ACS
Commissioner John Mattingly had also made comments. He had mentioned
to the Daily News editorial board that there were various
methods that could have been used, but weren't. He mentioned that the
ACS could have brought pressure on Brown's family to reveal more about
the girl's condition; that they could have paid more attention to
reports from Brown's school staff and could have sought a warrant to
enter into Brown's home, but none of these measures were used. Mayor
Michael Bloomberg had entered into the discussion by asking in this
Daily News article: "Why the caseworkers didn't push further, harder -
that's what we are investigating today."
ACS Recruitment
Drive
As of March, 2008, the ACS has launched a $1M
recruitment drive for new child welfare caseworkers. It was reported
that the agency was getting many applications, but retention of
caseworkers was a great problem. It was further reported that in 2007,
17 percent of the city's caseworkers had quit. The pay for the
position was reported as starting at $39,000. Videos and other
illustrations of the difficulty of the position are being used in the
recruitment process.
Comparison of Nixzmary Brown to Justina Morales
Andrea Peyser compared Nixzmary Brown to another
young girl murdered years ago, Justina Morales. In that murder case,
both the mother, Denise Solero, and her boyfriend "decided the girl
had to die because she resisted taking a bath."
More reports of child felonies in 2008
A number of suspicious child felonies had surfaced
and were reported in the news media in 2008, specifically the murder
of an 8-month-old named Elijah Rodriguez. Public Advocate Betsy
Gotbaum has said that at least 28 children have died since 2004 "under
suspicious circumstances." She said that "Child fatalities in the city
shelter system are a recurring problem ... We must do more to improve
coordination between Administration for Children's Services and
Department of Homeless Services to keep children safe in city
shelters." Both agencies defended their work with a joint statement:
"Our agencies are committed to the best interest of the children and
families we serve."
Cesar
Rodriguez Trial: 2008
Jury selection, forensic photographs and Prosecutors opening remarks
Jury selection had begun during the week of January
6, 2008 and the defense objective was to focus on the ACS and the
parents. The defense lawyer for Rodriguez was Jeffrey T. Schwartz, who
had competed in 2006 to represent Darryl Littlejohn in the murder case
of Imette St. Guillen.
Prosecutors were insistent that the judge allow
jurors to see 7 pictures of the dead girl at the start of the
testimony. Photographs of Brown, showing her bruised and battered body
"proved too gruesome yesterday for even her accused killer, Cesar
Rodriguez. The ADA wanted one of the pictures introduced to "refute
claims by Rodriguez and the girl's mother, Nixzaliz Santiago, that she
(Nixzmary) drowned." The issue of child discipline was also raised by
the prosecutor. Prosecution had planned to show crime-scene photos at
the trial, calling it a case of torture.
The jury composition was 10 women and two men; nine
of them had children of their own. Further details described the
jury's racial composition is composed of 9 black females, one black
male, and with two white females, with almost all of the women having
children; and the Lawyers having selected six alternate jurors in case
any jurors cannot continue during the trial period.
During opening remarks given on Wednesday, January
16, Assistant D.A. Ama Dwimoh told the Brooklyn jurors that "It was
inevitable her life would end the way it did: battered and beaten,
left alone on the floor, moaning until she could no longer hold onto
life". Defense lawyer Schwartz countered D.A. Dwimoh's remarks by
indicating that Rodriguez was "a loving family man"; that Brown's
mother was "deeply, deeply disturbed," and that the little girl
herself was troubled.
Details
of Brown's last days
It was reported that Brown was confined to a spare
room in the apartment with dirty mattresses, a broken radiator, an old
wooden school chair with a rope, and the litter box. Further, Brown
was said to be "routinely tied to the chair; raped; beaten repeatedly
with a belt and fists. Also reported were crime-scene photos taken in
the family's three-bedroom apartment, as well as a videotape of
Rodriguez casting blame on Brown."
Schwartz had said outside of the courtroom on
Wednesday that his client was only guilty of being "a strict
disciplinarian" and he then reiterated claims that Brown's mother
was responsible. He then made a statement that as the trial continued,
the jury would soon learn who the actual "monster" [sic] was in
Brown's murder.
On Friday, January 18, the trial focused on
household items which were transformed into instruments of torture for
Brown. The chief object was the chair that Brown was tied to. A white
nylon cord was still attached to the chair. A bungee cord and duct
tape, which "Rodriguez allegedly used to cinch Brown's ankles to the
chair" were shown to the jury. The jury seemed most disturbed by the
cat-litter box.
Brown's 'condition' at death
It was reported on the Monday, January 21 trial
portion that "Brown weighed just 36 pounds when police found her
beaten to death on the floor of her Brooklyn apartment, but her
family's fridge was anything but empty." Jurors saw crime-scene
photographs "of a well-stocked refrigerator full of milk, pancake mix,
salami, tortillas, cream cheese, lettuce - and the yogurt that
Nixzmary was punished for stealing the night she died."
In an attempt to show Rodriguez in a favorable
light, a drinking mug was shown at the Tuesday portion of the trial by
the defense lawyer with the title "World's Greatest Dad", to show the
jury that Rodriguez did not murder Brown. Schwartz then made these
comments: "I believe Nixzmary bought it for him for Father's Day," and
"Nixzmary and he had a close relationship. He was a good father. He
was a strict disciplinarian." Assistant D.A. Ama Dwimoh rebuked the
whole idea of Rodriguez ever being a good father to Brown.
Further court discussion centered on the black
leather belt that Rodriguez used to allegedly hit Brown. There were
traces of Brown's DNA on the belt, according to prosecutors.
New
evidence and trial delays
New evidence was presented at the close of the
trial on Wednesday, January 23. A gag order was issued by the court.
Mention was made of Rodriguez "petty criminal record". It was
anticipated that this new "mystery" evidence would be revealed during
Wednesday or later. However, for a second time, jurors were sent home
on Thursday. It was reported that both sides in the court case refused
to talk about developments. A 'gag' order was in place and the Daily
News was attempting to lift the order. The next time that jurors would
meet would be Monday, January 28, 2008.
The trial was delayed on January 23 and continued
for a fourth day. It was later revealed that the unexplained delays
were due to a new witness. The judge, Priscilla Hall, had held a
"sealed hearing" because of witness' safety concerns. The gag order
remained to prevent either side from speaking about the case. A number
of newspapers had filed papers seeking to lift the gag order. It was
further revealed that Brown's blood was found in numerous areas of the
spare room she was kept in. The expert brought forth, Taylor
Dickerson, said that her DNA profile was clearly present. The chief
prosecutor said she was tortured and the blood found on the jeans that
her stepfather wore on January 11 belonged to Brown.
Social Worker
testifies
It had been revealed in a few news reports in
January 2008 that a social worker for Brown's school at P.S. 256,
Margarita Cotto, had become concerned with Brown's case and reported
her findings to the ACS. She had pleaded with the child welfare
workers to remove Brown from her parents, and tried, in vain, to enter
Brown's apartment but was barred from entering by Rodriguez. On May 16
of 2005, a guidance counselor who had filed two abuse reports
contacted the state child abuse hotline about Brown's bruises and also
made note that Brown had been absent from school for 46 days. Later,
an ACS caseworker visited Brown's home, but the caseworker couldn't
verify the abuse charge and accepted Brown's mother's word that Brown
would return to her school.
The jury was shown a video depicting the family
shopping on Monday, January 9, 2006 while Brown was left home. The
shopping occurred at a Target store in Downtown Brooklyn, the Atlantic
Center Mall. The specific toy items being purchased were Power Ranger
action figures, Hot Wheels cars, Play-Doh, Bratz dolls, etc. Nowhere
is Brown seen in the video, and the defense lawyer said the video
didn't prove anything.
Miranda Rights
argument
Rodriguez's defense claimed that he was never read
his Miranda rights, and that his constitutional rights were violated.
The discussion then turned to the actual arrest of Rodriguez.
On February 4, the jurors watched a video statement
showing Rodriguez talking about the abuse he inflicted on Brown. As
had happened previously, jurors showed strong emotions as they
listened to his explanations. Prosecutors believe the video to be "the
most damning evidence". Prosecutor Ama Dwimoh said "He calmly and
coldly talks about how he would beat Nixzmary Brown". Rodriguez's
lawyer, Schwartz, attacked the video by cross-examining Det. Steven
Sneider, who was presenting the video evidence. At one point, Schwartz
called for a mistrial but his motion was denied. Schwartz then stated
to the jury that Rodriguez was taking responsibility for wounds
inflicted by Brown's mother, Nixzaliz. There was discussion of a
"jailhouse witness" which the New York Daily News took credit
in first reporting.
At the Wednesday, February 6 portion of the trial,
defense lawyer Schwartz made a comment concerning the prosecutor as
having possible porn in her home. Brooklyn Supreme Court Justice
Priscilla Hall then reprimanded Schwartz for that remark after the
jury was dismissed for lunch. Schwartz, according to a news report,
had been complaining that prosecutors had "sandbagged" his defense of
Rodriguez using Brown's backpack and other personal items. The
prosecutor replied that the jury had no interest in seeing what else
was found at the apartment: piles of pornography. Schwartz responded
saying that pornography is not illegal, and later implied that Dwimoh
had pornography at her house.
Forensic photographs, head blow and brain hemorrhage
Forensic photographs were shown to the jury on
Thursday, February 7, and the jury reacted emotionally. Barbara
Sampson of the medical examiner's office said on the stand that the
bruises were only hours or days old. It was indicated that a head blow
Brown received two days before she died was the cause of her death.
"She was unconscious and going into respiratory depression for at
least several hours before she died," Dr. Barbara Sampson informed
jurors. It was further learned that neither Rodriguez nor Santiago did
anything to help Brown during the hemorrhage. Further photographs of
Brown were shown to the jury to back up Sampson's diagnosis. Sampson
said in court that the blow to Brown's head was the "straw that broke
the camel's back" and she further stated that Brown died from "child
abuse syndrome." Dr. Barbara Sampson also provided the following
details during the day's trial, saying that Brown had been somnolent
and then in a coma. Sampson also indicated that Brown probably had
progressive respiratory depression and perhaps had made moaning and
groaning sounds, and was also gasping for air. Sampson further
indicated that subdural hematoma was the mechanism of her death.
A
child service worker testifies
A specialist for the ACS, Vanessa Rhoden, had
reported that on December 1, 2005, she had witnessed early signs of
abuse in Brown but was rebuffed by Rodriguez. Rodriguez had told
Rhoden that he had taken Brown to the hospital, and then used foul
language to address her and end the conversation. This revelation took
defense lawyer Schwartz off-guard during the Tuesday, February 19
trial portion because he had called Rhoden to the stand to show the
court and the jury that there was no cause for alarm at that time. It
was after this meeting that it was reported that ACS tried further
visits to Brown's family's apartment but was refused each time.
Rhoden testified in court on Tuesday, February 19
that Rodriguez cursed her when she made inquiries concerning
"lacerations, bruises and welts" on the girl. She further testified
that Brown's mother attempted to show her a fetus kept in a jar in the
family's apartment. Rhoden indicated that she was disturbed by this
revelation and so recommended mental health counseling for Brown's
mother. It was further indicated that Rhoden didn't believe Brown was
in an unsafe environment and so she didn't make any motion to have
Brown or the other children removed from the family.
Grandmother's
testimony
Defense lawyer Schwartz was planning on calling
Rodriguez's mother-in-law, Maria Gonzalez, to the witness stand during
the week of February 24. Schwartz defense strategy of Rodriguez
involved blaming his wife, Nixzaliz Santiago, and showing that she was
the actual murderer. Gonzalez is suing New York city for $150 million
for negligence, and the failure of the ACS to act on behalf of her
granddaughter. Brown's grandmother, Maria Gonzalez, finally provided
her testimony during the Wednesday, March 6 portion of the trial.
Gonzalez, however, used the opportunity to defend the $150 million
lawsuit that she had filed. As before, Schwartz continued his tactic
of taking the testimony of others to use against Santiago to show that
she was unstable. Gonzalez had testified that Santiago had left home
for a man at the age of 17, that she had six more children, and that
she continued to depend upon other men for her welfare. Further
testimony by Gonzalez resulted in her testimony denying the continued
trial allegations of Schwartz that Brown was a "wild child". She
further indicated that Brown and her siblings were in fear of
Rodriguez.
E.R. doctor witness and other medical testimony
An emergency room doctor was called to the witness
stand during the Thursday, February 21 trial portion and reported that
he had witnessed no signs of abuse on Brown after a medical exam 7
weeks before Brown's death in which Rodriguez brought the little girl
to the hospital. When prosecutor Linda Weinman had grilled him as to
whether he made a report, and the doctor said 'no', the prosecutor
indicated that his decision was a mistake, but the physician indicated
that he didn't know at the time. The official hospital records from
the November 29, 2005 visit say "No other bruises present."
On Monday, February 25, a medical testimony was
expected to be given by a Suffolk County medical examiner, Dr. Charles
Wetli, supposedly putting the Prosecution's case in jeopardy. It was
expected that the testimony would ruin Prosecution's argument that
Brown was the victim of child abuse syndrome. However, Wetli indicated
that Brown was definitely killed by a blow to her head. This
conflicted with Defense's argument that Brown was never hit on her
head.
In the Tuesday, February 26 trial portion, it was
indicated that the constant Defense argument that Brown was killed
because she caused Santiago to have a miscarriage was found groundless
because Prosecutor Linda Weinman told jurors that Santiago had
confided in a psychiatrist that she blamed Rodriguez because of a
"beating". She revealed from the report that, in November, 2005,
Rodriguez had choked and thrown her to the floor and, within hours,
Santiago had miscarried. There was discussion as to whether the report
was admissible in court. Schwartz contended that the report proved
Santiago a liar, while Weinmam wanted the report kept confidential. It
was explained that this was an obsession, the reason Santiago kept the
fetal remains in a jar. Schwartz had said of Santiago that "she
believed Nixzmary caused the miscarriage and I know that based on what
my client has said to me and to the police from day one." Schwartz
also maintains that it was Santiago who delivered the death blow to
Brown.
Attorney change and apology for delays
On February 27, the lawyer for Nixzaliz Santiago,
Robert Abrams, removed himself from the case citing "communication
difficulties. Santiago believed, according to the article, that a
psychiatric evaluation given to defense would harm her case.
The judge in the murder case apologized to jurors
about the delays in the trial. It was reported that the trial never
started before 10:30 a.m. and rarely went past 5 p.m. Jurors were sent
home five times without hearing any testimony and were getting long
lunch breaks and a half-day every Friday. It was also reported by
Schwartz that witnesses were "hostile" and "stalled their
appearances."
Unidentified Riker's Island inmate blames Santiago
It was reported that a secret witness, later
identified as a Riker's Island inmate, was claiming that Brown's
mother was her murderer. There was also mention of a secret diary,
which was a collection of handwritten notes that the inmate took
during her time in jail with Santiago. Prosecutors have dismissed that
person as unreliable, but the defense wants her to take the stand. It
was reported that if the witness were to testify, it could be in a
closed-door hearing for safety reasons.
During the Tuesday, March 4 portion of the trial,
the jurors finally heard the testimony of the inmate/witness. This
testimony by the inmate also revealed that she may have hurt Rodriguez
in the past. One person later commented that this witness may have
helped the prosecution more than the defense as the testimony was
supposed to focus the blame for Brown's death on Santiago. It was
later published in a newspaper that the unidentified inmate revealed a
story of the sexual abuse of Brown. She revealed that Santiago had
desired to hurt Brown because she discovered Rodriguez making Brown
have oral sex with him. According to the inmate's verbal testimony,
which she recorded in a set of composition books, the inmate indicated
that Santiago "told me her child was a bad kid and her and her husband
killed her." The inmate also said that Santiago despised her daughter
and defended Rodriguez. According to the article, the inmate reading
from a May 15, 2006 journal entry said that Santiago had said "
...that her husband was a good man and the child was evil". The inmate
said that Santiago referred to Brown as 'diablo'. It was further noted
in the article that the sexual charges against Rodriguez had been
dropped before the trial and that the M.E. had indicated that there
were no signs of sexual abuse.
On Tuesday, March 11, Schwartz had concluded the
defense portion of the case. It is possible that Rodriguez's fate
could be decided with closing arguments on Wednesday, March 12.
Prosecutor Dwimoh appeared very confident outside of Brooklyn Supreme
Court, saying "I'm confident at the end of the day, Nixzmary Brown
will get her justice."
Rodriguez
trial conclusion
As the trial was nearing its end, the closing
arguments were given. Prosecutor Ama Dwimoh displayed again the photos
showing a tortured Brown. Dwimoh made these statements: "He's nothing
short of a murderer"; "Now he's having you believe, 'it ain't me; it's
my wife.' Hmmm!" and then she argued "There is nothing that 7-year-old
Nixzmary Brown could ever do to deserve that." Dwimoh had declared
that even in death, Brown herself "remains the most eloquent piece of
evidence in this case". She described how Brown's "body speaks volumes
about the life she was forced to live." Dwimoh did this while
projecting the images of Brown's corpse onto three large screens.
Dwimoh further said that "Each mark, bruise, laceration, contusion,
abrasion, ligature mark, tells the story of systematic abuse and
torture that she suffered at the hands of this defendant"
Schwartz continued to portray Rodriguez as a family
man who punished Brown with beatings, but still insisted that Brown's
mother was the actual killer.
The jury began deliberating on March 13. They had
received instructions from Justice L. Priscilla Hall in deciding on
the 12 criminal charges against Rodriguez. Schwartz had indicated that
Rodriguez would be convicted of something. He made one last
unsuccessful attempt at a mistrial, arguing that the prosecution
shouldn't have used the photographs.
On Tuesday, March 18, Rodriguez was convicted of
first-degree manslaughter. Rodriguez faced a maximum of 29 years for
the manslaughter charge, weapons possession and endangering the
welfare of a child.
On Thursday, April 3, Brooklyn Supreme Court
Justice L. Priscilla Hall, sentenced Cesar Rodriguez to a term of 26⅓
to 29 years in prison. He was given 25 years for first-degree
manslaughter and 1⅓ to 4 years for false
imprisonment. This sentence was the maximum term. Prior to the judge
imposing her sentence, Rodriguez briefly addressed the court saying,
"I'm just sorry for causing anybody any emotional pain or distorted
memories about the child. I'm just sorry. I loved Nixzmary." As he was
led away, a woman in the crowd yelled "murderer!" and another shouted
"I!"
Nixzaliz Santiago's trial: 2008
Santiago was harassed by other inmates during a bus
ride to the Brooklyn courthouse. She had complained to the judge about
her treatment and other inmates. Her lawyer, Sammy Sanchez, told
Brooklyn Supreme Court Justice Patricia DiMango that Santiago "was
physically harassed", this at the first hearing since Rodriguez was
convicted of manslaughter.
Trial begins
The jury selection began on Monday, September 15,
2008.
During the opening remarks, prosecutors revealed
that Brown's last words as she lay dying were "Mommy, mommy, mommy".
Prosecutor Ama Dwimoh stated that Santiago did not stop Rodriguez from
"repeatedly beating" Brown. Dwimoh also said that Santiago "didn't
protect", "didn't love" and "didn't nurture" Brown.
Supreme Court Justice Patricia DiMango allowed one
juror, who was an elementary school teacher, to leave. Santiago
herself was reported to have "wiped her eyes".
Defense Attorney Sammy Sanchez pleaded Santiago's
case, arguing that she couldn't help herself because she, too, was
battered by Cesar Rodriguez. He stated, "You know why she didn't call
the police? There is no phone. He disconnected the phone. He isolated
the family".
Trial halted due to accusations against juror
The trial was later brought to a halt by Justice
Patricia DiMango amidst secret meeting accusations against a juror and
a "possible mystery witness", all caused by a letter sent to a defense
lawyer that DiMango had obtained. The letter-writer informed the Daily
News that the teacher raised his hand to indicate he could not be
fair. However the judge and the lawyers did not observe this action.
Then the juror told the judge that he did not raise his hand. DiMango
handled the most serious allegation by questioning a juror, a
35-year-old schoolteacher who was accused of admitting he could not be
fair, in her chambers. Dimango then addressed the courtroom with these
words: "If it comes to my attention that anyone here is attempting in
any way to inappropriately influence these proceedings ... I take that
extremely seriously, and will deal directly with that individual or
individuals."
Neighbor testifies
A neighbor named Ulbis Rivera later testified at
Santiago's trial. Rivera had made a 911 call, shouting that
"7-year-old is unconscious." Rivera indicated that Santiago appeared
"calm" even though she made moaning sounds heard on the 911 call.
Rivera indicated that Santiago told her that Brown had drowned. She
was, however, still lying on the floor, dry and clothed.
Rivera said that Santiago was "faking" remorse over
Brown's death. Prosecutor Ama Dwimoh asked her "Why do you believe
[Santiago] was faking?", to which Rivera said "Her daughter was on the
floor, she was all disfigured, [Santiago] goes to my house and she
calmly tells me the baby drowned." She further said to Dwimoh: "When I
go downstairs, and I come across the girl like that, it went through
my head, 'She's calm, the girl's dead, and she's acting like nothing
happened.' "And then, when I call 911, she's howling." Rivera cried on
the witness stand as Dwimoh presented to her photographs of Brown.
It was indicated in a previous newspaper article
that Santiago, if found guilty, could face a conviction of up to life
imprisonment for allowing Rodriguez to abuse Brown.
Defense argument
Santiago's lawyer, Kathleen Mullin, conceded on
Tuesday's trial portion that her client was guilty - guilty only of
failing to realize that Brown was dying from Rodriguez's beatings. She
urged the Brooklyn jury to convict Santiago of criminally negligent
homicide, which would carry a maximum of four years in prison and
continued to blame Rodriguez for the deadly blows. Prosecutors
insisted that Santiago had to know of her husband's abuse and showed
autopsy photographs to make their point.
Duct tape used
on Brown
Mullin continued in her defense of Santiago by
saying that Brown was prevented from crying out because duct tape was
used on her mouth, while Rodriguez was beating her. Mullin then held
up a picture of Nixzmary's battered body and said "What he was doing
was this." She used this in her closing argument, stating that
Santiago had no idea that Rodriguez was beating Brown to her death.
Mulin backed up her defense by using the physical evidence that the
tape marks on Brown's face were fresh; that there was a "ball of
rolled-up tape in the bathroom garbage pail"; that Santiago couldn't
hear Brown crying out because of the duct tape and because the door to
the back room was shut. Assistant D.A. Dwimoh argued against this
defense saying that the girl was "unrecognizable" in death; then she
stated that "Someone in this courtroom had a duty to help, and that
someone is Nixzaliz Santiago." Dwimoh said that while Brown was dying,
Santiago was plotting her defense that Rodriguez was solely
responsible.
Jury deliberations and Trial conclusion
The jury deliberated for 18 hours over a three-day
period, then found Nixzaliz Santiago guilty of Manslaughter; the same
verdict that Rodriguez had received. She was acquitted of the more
serious charge of second-degree murder. However, because she was
previously convicted of four lesser crimes: assault for binding Brown
with a bungee cord, blackening her eye, unlawful imprisonment and
endangering her welfare, Santiago would face more time when sentenced
on November 5, 2008. There was no reaction from Santiago when the
verdict was read. The judge indicated that a protection order would
prevent her from seeing her other children. If her sentences are
applied consecutively, Santiago could face up to 43 years in prison.
D.A. Dwimoh's
statement
After the trial, D.A. Dwimoh made this statement:
"Today was a good day for children because this jury said that parents
have a duty - it's not just what you do but what you don't do . . .
Nixzmary, being a 7-year-old child, was owed a duty by her mother to
protect her and give her medical attention."
Sentencing
Santiago was sentenced on November 12, 2008 to 43
years in prison. Justice Patricia DiMango made these harsh remarks to
her: "You may not have delivered the fatal blow, but were it not for
your failure to act, Nixzmary Brown would probably not have died from
that blow," and "By your own statements, she gasped for air - moaning
- and called for you twice until she died. You, Mrs. Santiago, ignored
the desperate calls and left this little 7-year-old alone and you did
nothing" and finally "You had a duty to act. You were the mother."
Santiago's defense attorney Kathleen Mullin said she would appeal.
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