People of Michigan v. Mercedes Laporcha Kemp

CourtMichigan Court of Appeals
DecidedDecember 2, 2014
Docket316254
StatusUnpublished

This text of People of Michigan v. Mercedes Laporcha Kemp (People of Michigan v. Mercedes Laporcha Kemp) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Michigan Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
People of Michigan v. Mercedes Laporcha Kemp, (Mich. Ct. App. 2014).

Opinion

STATE OF MICHIGAN

COURT OF APPEALS

PEOPLE OF THE STATE OF MICHIGAN, UNPUBLISHED December 2, 2014 Plaintiff-Appellee, V No. 316254 Ingham Circuit Court MERCEDES LAPORCHA KEMP, LC No. 12-000694-FC

Defendant-Appellant.

Before: OWENS, P.J., and MARKEY and SERVITTO, JJ.

PER CURIAM.

Following a jury trial, defendant was convicted of second-degree murder, MCL 750.317, torture, MCL 750.85, and first-degree child abuse, MCL 750.136b(2). The trial court sentenced defendant to concurrent terms of imprisonment of 25 to 50 years for the murder conviction, 15 to 30 years for the torture conviction, and seven years and 11 months to 15 years for the child-abuse conviction. Defendant appeals by right, challenging the sufficiency of the evidence. We affirm.

I. FACTS

This case arises from the death of defendant’s two-year-old son as the result of multiple blunt-force injuries inflicted upon him. The prosecution’s theory of the case was that defendant and her boyfriend, Marcus Hill,1 isolated themselves and the child from friends, family, law enforcement, and others, and engaged in an escalating pattern of beatings and other excessive physical discipline out of frustrations over efforts to toilet train the child. The prosecution proceeded on the basis of alternate theories of defendant’s direct participation in the violence, and of her aiding and abetting Hill in such violence.

Defendant brought her child to the hospital early in the afternoon of April 30, 2013, but he had no vital signs and abnormally low body temperature and blood sugar levels. Emergency medical providers’ intensive attempts to resuscitate the boy were not successful. Defendant

1 Hill was separately tried and convicted of first-degree murder, first-degree child abuse and torture and received a sentence of nonparolable life imprisonment for the murder conviction, concurrent with lesser sentences for the other convictions.

-1- offered friends, family members, hospital employees, and police investigators inconsistent accounts of how she spent the several hours ahead of that hospital visit, but she consistently maintained that the victim was exclusively in Hill’s care when the fatal injuries were inflicted. Defendant’s demeanor as she brought her son to the hospital and attended the resuscitation efforts was described as stunned and sad, yet calm. She was not at all frantic or hysterical.

The autopsy brought to light that the child had suffered many injuries over time. External injuries included bruising on the eyes, ears, forehead, back, chest, buttocks, arms, and thighs, and abrasions on the chin and lip, all of which were consistent with applications of blunt force. One of the youngster’s injuries was of a size and shape that suggested a cigarette burn. Another was damage to the skin at the base of the boy’s penis, which expert testimony described as typical of abuse relating to toilet-training. Internal injuries included full thickness bleeding on the scalp, hemorrhaging into the neck, and bleeding into the lungs, and a liver broken into two or three pieces as the result of an extremely forceful blow to the abdomen. The death was classified as a homicide.

Defendant’s friends and relatives testified that she became increasingly isolated from them after she began her intimate relationship with Hill in the summer of 2011. The testimony included that defendant had previously disciplined her children mainly through verbal admonishments and “time outs,” only occasionally resorted to spanking by hand, but then increasingly acquiesced in and inflicted the harsher physical punishments Hill favored, including whipping the children with a belt. The testimony also included that defendant refused to open the door at various times when relatives, police officers, or workers from Child Protection Services came to her apartment to investigate or offer assistance. Defendant’s intimates testified that defendant never complained to them of any abusive behavior on Hill’s part.

Defendant testified that Hill began living with her late in 2011 and routinely physically abused her, and increasingly imposed restrictions on where she could go, with whom she could communicate, and who was allowed into the apartment. Of particular concern was that her children were still prone to toilet-training incidents, over which Hill was very impatient and prone to respond with excessive corporal punishment. Defendant admitted that she once tried to cause Hill to think she had struck her daughter with a belt over a toilet-training incident in order to placate him and also that Hill insisted that her son spend long periods “on the potty,” and that she acquiesced in this in hopes of protecting the child from “a whooping.”

Asked about April 30, 2012, defendant testified that Hill sent her out of the apartment to try to borrow a telephone charger from neighbors, once at about 7:00 that morning, then again a few hours later. According to defendant, before leaving on the second round of those errands, she checked on the children and found them still asleep. But when she returned from what was another failed attempt to obtain a charger, she instinctively felt the need to check on her son. She found him “trying to lean on the potty trying to catch his balance.” Defendant continued that she asked Hill what he had done to the child, but that Hill responded with verbal and physical abuse. Defendant testified that Hill left the immediate area after a few minutes, upon which she tried unsuccessfully to give the boy water and induce him to talk. Hill, however, returned with a knife and admonished her not to leave the apartment or let anyone in.

-2- Defendant continued that she did not run out of the house while Hill was still present because she feared he would “[k]ill all of us.” Instead, she retrieved a first aid kit, looked for something in it that might be of use, and tried to administer some anti-nausea medicine which the child did not swallow. After perhaps 45 minutes, according to defendant, she sensed that Hill had left the house; she looked through the closets to make sure that he was gone, then went to a neighboring couple’s home and asked for a telephone. She then accepted an offer of a ride to the hospital from one of them.

On cross-examination, defendant admitted expecting that her son would continue to have toilet-training accidents which would in turn draw continuing physical abuse from Hill, who had struck the child with a belt and inflicted injuries resulting in bruises, black eyes, and scars. She agreed that she understood Hill to be a violent man and tried to hide those violent tendencies from family, friends, CPS, and the police. She further agreed that she had allowed Hill to stay in her home even though he was not party to the lease and was deemed a trespasser by the apartment complex. Asked if she had “outright lied” to those who had come to her residence to try to offer some protection from Hill, defendant answered in the affirmative. Defendant additionally admitted that Hill was a drug dealer and chronic drug user, but that she had told no one about those things and continued to leave her children in Hill’s care. Asked if she did these things on her own volition, defendant answered in the affirmative.

As cross-examination continued, defendant testified that she had bathed the victim perhaps two days before he died and had noticed marks on his arms and legs, bruises on his left arm, injuries to his back, eyes, and ears, and “like the rash mark” on the boy’s penis, but then lied to a police detective who had asked about what injuries the child had before he died. Defendant added that the injuries her son had accumulated by the night before he died included a scabbed mark on the neck that might be a cigarette burn but that she did not know how he had acquired it.

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People of Michigan v. Mercedes Laporcha Kemp, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-of-michigan-v-mercedes-laporcha-kemp-michctapp-2014.