People v. Dickerson

42 A.D.3d 228, 837 N.Y.S.2d 101
CourtAppellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York
DecidedJune 5, 2007
StatusPublished
Cited by20 cases

This text of 42 A.D.3d 228 (People v. Dickerson) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
People v. Dickerson, 42 A.D.3d 228, 837 N.Y.S.2d 101 (N.Y. Ct. App. 2007).

Opinion

OPINION OF THE COURT

Catterson, J.

On August 31, 1996, police officers responding to a call at the home of the defendant and his wife Carla Lockwood found the emaciated remains of Nadine Lockwood, their daughter, in a filthy crib. She weighed 15 pounds, and looked like little more than a skeleton. The officers were shocked to discover that Na[230]*230dine would have been five years old had she lived another 19 days.

Subsequently, medical evidence would reveal that Nadine had been starved since infancy and towards the end she “began to break down her own internal organs to sustain her life.” Police arrested Lockwood the next morning; and, following an investigation, the defendant was also arrested and charged with two counts of second-degree murder (depraved indifference murder and depraved indifference murder of a person less than 11 years old). After a jury trial, the defendant was convicted of both counts and sentenced to concurrent indeterminate terms of imprisonment of 25 years to life.

On appeal, the defendant argues that the convictions should be reduced to criminally negligent homicide since depraved indifference was not proved beyond a reasonable doubt. The defendant argues that Nadine lived with her mother, and he only made sporadic visits, during which he fed Nadine and did not perceive that she was starving to death. He also argues that he was deprived of a fair trial by the admission of gruesome and unnecessary autopsy photos and that his sentence is excessive.1

For the reasons set forth below, this Court disagrees and unanimously affirms the defendant’s convictions for depraved indifference murder. The defendant was not deprived of a fair trial; his sentence is deserved, not excessive, since, as the trial court rightly observed, any possible mitigating factors pale in comparison to the unspeakable horror of Nadine’s death.

“Murder, the unique crime, is a paradigm of its age.”2 Testimony and evidence at trial established that five-year-old Nadine was starved to death. The testimony of Nadine’s pediatrician established that at birth Nadine was a healthy baby, weighing more than six pounds and measuring 19 inches. Her head circumference and alertness scores were within normal range. In her first year, however, Nadine’s growth rate dropped and her records noted “failure to thrive.” The pediatrician did not see Nadine after she was 10 months old.

At her death, just before her fifth birthday, Nadine weighed 15 pounds, a weight more appropriate for a six-month-old child, and she was 32 inches long, the average measurement for an 18 month old. Her brain size of 830 grams was also more appropri[231]*231ate for an 18-month-old child. The medical examiner testified that Nadine was emaciated, had no muscle mass, as well as having sunken eyes and cheeks. She had hair loss, and prominent bones protruded through her skin. Her anus protruded due to a lack of soft tissue in her buttocks. Her internal organs were abnormally small. Nadine also had small scars and fresh bruises scattered on her body. There was no elasticity to her skin. There was vomit in her airways and evidence of prolonged aspiration.

Both Nadine’s pediatrician and the medical examiner testified that Nadine’s small brain size was attributable to being starved from sometime between 3 and 10 months prior to her death. They concluded that she had experienced “terminal starvation,” meaning that her body was breaking down vital organs to survive. Her bones had simply stopped growing due to inadequate calorie intake. Both the pediatrician and the medical examiner agreed that Nadine had died as a result of malnutrition and dehydration that was a direct result of starvation which had been going on for at least one year.

At trial, testimony and evidence further established the following: Nadine was the fourth child born to the defendant and Lockwood, who were married in 1986. Through a previous relationship, Lockwood had a daughter, Nicole, who lived with the family. Several months before Nadine was born, the defendant left Lockwood. The following year, Lockwood and the five children moved into a three-bedroom railroad flat. Subsequently, the defendant “reconciled” with Carla and they had two more children in 1993 and 1994. Although reconciled, the defendant lived with his mother but he would visit Lockwood every two weeks, coinciding with her receipt of her public assistance checks, and stay “a day, a night, a few days.” Everyone slept on mattresses in the rear bedroom, except Nadine, who slept in a crib.

The testimony of the three older children as well as friends and neighbors who visited established that the defendant and Lockwood treated Nadine differently from the other children and were distant and cold to her from the beginning. While everyone else ate in the living room, Nadine was not allowed out of her crib to join the family for dinner. She ate in her crib or watched the other children eat. The defendant and Lockwood restricted Nadine’s food, often feeding her scraps and leftovers. Some days Nadine got nothing at all to eat and cried from hunger.

Nadine, who at first talked and knew her siblings’ names, spent most, and eventually all, of her time in her dirty crib. [232]*232There was no sheet on the mattress but a sheet hung over the rail to block the view inside. Nicole and two of the other children testified that both parents (the defendant and Lockwood) beat Nadine; and that she was made to stand up in a corner of the crib facing the wall with her hands behind her back. Nicole also testified that the defendant yelled at Nadine and called her an “animal” and “beast.”

As Nadine continued to receive little food, she stopped talking and playing. A neighbor testified that “she was frail and pale and could barely walk like a two year old should.” By early 1994, when Nadine was almost three, the defendant, Lockwood and the children were lying to neighbors and friends, telling them that Nadine was living “down south” with the defendant’s sister. When visitors came to the apartment, the defendant or Lockwood hid Nadine.

Testimony further established that during this period, the defendant was at the house frequently. On one occasion, while playing “flight school” with the children, the defendant threw Nadine against the ceiling, cutting her back. Another time, when Nadine was crying, the defendant said he would give her “something to cry for.” He placed her in a plastic bag and swung her around the room. The bag broke and Nadine struck a dresser, causing a bloody gash above her eyebrow. The defendant did not seek any medical attention for her.

In June 1995, someone called the child abuse hotline anonymously and reported that Nadine, who at age three looked like a “third world child,” was being isolated and starved. On July 8, 1995, a sergeant from the NYPD’s child abuse unit went to investigate. Lockwood “borrowed” a neighbor’s child who pretended to be Nadine. The police sergeant concluded that the allegations were unfounded.

According to the testimony of the two eldest children, between April and May 1996, the defendant lived continuously in the apartment. By this time, Nadine, who spent her days lying in the crib crying, had visible bones and hair loss.

At the end of May 1996, the defendant moved out after another argument with Lockwood. In June 1996, he returned.

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Bluebook (online)
42 A.D.3d 228, 837 N.Y.S.2d 101, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-dickerson-nyappdiv-2007.