People v. Kinder

75 A.D.2d 34, 428 N.Y.S.2d 375, 1980 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 10870
CourtAppellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York
DecidedMay 23, 1980
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 75 A.D.2d 34 (People v. Kinder) 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. Kinder, 75 A.D.2d 34, 428 N.Y.S.2d 375, 1980 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 10870 (N.Y. Ct. App. 1980).

Opinion

OPINION OF THE COURT

Hancock, Jr., J.

In his appeal from a conviction after a jury trial for first degree manslaughter (Penal Law, § 125.20, subd l)1 in connection with the sadistic beating and torture death of three-year-[37]*37old James Watts, Jr., defendant claims, inter alia, that he was denied his right to a fair trial by rulings of the trial court which effectively precluded full and fair cross-examination of the chief prosecution witness, the child’s mother, Diane Watts. We hold for the reasons stated herein that the defendant was provided a fair trial and affirm the conviction. The salient facts are as follows.2

On Sunday, January 29, 1978, at approximately 7:00 A.M., James Watts, Jr., six days short of his third birthday and weighing 27 pounds, arrived in an ambulance at the emergency room of the Children’s Hospital in Buffalo, not breathing and without a pulse. Twenty-five to thirty minutes of resuscitative efforts by the emergency room personnel were unsuccessful, and the child was pronounced dead. An initial examination of the boy’s body revealed numerous bruises scattered over the head, trunk and extremities, a torn frenulum (the piece of tissue which holds the upper lip to the gum), and two quarter-size areas on the buttocks where the skin had been denuded.3 An autopsy performed later that day revealed abrasions on the child’s cheeks, hematomas within and on the exterior of the heart, a black and blue mark on the anterior surface of the liver, internal bruising and bleeding in the pelvic region, including bleeding from the tissues around the rectum and bladder (the boy’s scrotum externally exhibited black and blue marks),4 a linear mark on the base of the penis,5 and marked swelling and extensive bleeding in all three fossae of the child’s brain.6 Dr. Ernest Fernandez, Erie County Medical Examiner, testified that the bleeding in the brain and the weakened state of the child’s body (resulting [38]*38from repeated beatings) ultimately led to his death, and that Jimmy was, in his opinion, a battered child—"a child that was injured repeatedly.”

The police took Diane Watts to headquarters and after more than 12 hours of interrogation, she gave them a statement. Upon her indictment with defendant for the murder of her son, she moved for and obtained a severance. At defendant’s trial she appeared as the chief witness for the prosecution.

Watts testified that she became sexually intimate with defendant shortly after she met him in August, 1977 while she still resided with her husband, James Watts, Sr., and her two children, Jimmy and his younger sister Amber. The defendant became a frequent visitor in the Watts’ home, often babysitting for the children. In November, 1977 while Diane Watts was at work, James Watts, Sr., asked Diane’s mother and his sister, a nurse, to come over and examine some bruises which appeared on Jimmy’s buttocks and lower back. When her husband questioned her about the bruises, she told him untruthfully that she had caused them. It was actually the defendant, she testified, who had been to blame.

On December 22, 1977, without telling her husband, Watts took the household furnishings, the family van, clothing and the two children and moved into an apartment with defendant. In that living arrangement, she stated, defendant could babysit for Jimmy and Amber while she worked.

Following the move, the injuries to Jimmy Watts became more frequent and more severe: e.g., a cut lip, unhealed marks on his buttocks; a limp; an inability to sit down; and complaints of pain in the boy’s "rear end”.7 At trial Watts attrib[39]*39uted the injuries to the defendant but testified that she also disciplined Jimmy with sticks and belts at the defendant’s suggestion and because the defendant would have done it "worse”.

On the morning preceding Jimmy’s death, before she went to work, Diane Watts testified that no new injuries appeared on Jimmy’s body and that there had been none for the previous three or four days. As she was preparing to leave for work, Jimmy told her that he was hungry. At work she received several telephone calls from the defendant reporting: that Jimmy had spilled bread, salt and pepper, had removed his clothing and had eaten cookies at the dining room table; that defendant had given him a whipping and put him in Amber’s room; that Jimmy "wouldn’t live like that anymore”; that someone had broken in and beaten Jimmy up; that there were bumps on Jimmy’s head; that Diane Watts could take him to the hospital if she thought it necessary when she got home; and that he was putting Jimmy down for a nap. When Diane Watts returned home at approximately 9:00 p.m. on Saturday night, Jimmy was lying on the couch under a blanket with a towel on his head, apparently asleep. Defendant told her first that an intruder had beaten the boy up because "some people hate blacks and whites living together” and, then, without attempting to explain the inconsistency, that Jimmy was suffering from the flu. When Watts undressed him and put on his pajamas, Jimmy was limp and she saw that he had fresh bruises all over his body. When she spoke to him, he did not respond. Watts took some sleeping pills and went to bed. The next thing she knew, defendant was screaming at her to come and see if Jimmy was breathing. Watts listened to Jimmy’s chest and heard nothing. The boy was limp and blood was coming from his mouth. The rescue squad was called and Jimmy was rushed to the Children’s Hospital.

Diane Watts was by no means the only witness linking defendant to Jimmy’s death. Henry Johnson described an occurrence in his home on December 26, 1977 when defendant, without any apparent reason, struck Jimmy two or three times with a heavy leather belt and then hit the boy in the middle of his back with a closed fist, knocking the child into the wall. He sat there, Johnson related, "flinch[ing] like he was hurting.” The defendant then said, "I would have killed the little bastard.” Johnson told of a second incident on January 2, 1978, also in his home. Defendant slapped Jimmy, [40]*40who was "squirming” on the couch, and grabbed his shirt, which came off, revealing a "nasty”, "dark bruise” on the boy’s lower back. Answering Johnson’s inquiry as to how it happened, defendant boasted: "You ain’t seen nothing either. You ought to see his ass. I kicked his ass.” On another occasion, in September, 1977, defendant hit the deceased, who had wet his pants, Johnson stated, using a white belt with metal ornaments.

Michael Lopez testified that on January 28, 1978, the day before Jimmy died, defendant asked him what he would do if he found "a kid playing in his potty and the kid was already toilet trained.” Lopez advised the defendant to "give him an ass whipping, but * * * make sure the kid knew what he was getting it for.”

Henry Brown, a fellow inmate of defendant’s in the Erie County Holding Center for a short time in March, 1979, testified that the defendant had offered him $3,000 if he would tell a friend, who was in a cell near Diane Watts, to stop Watts from testifying. According to Brown, defendant admitted that he had "smacked the kid aside the head and he didn’t mean to hit him * * * so hard and the kid had died” and that he "and his girlfriend both had beaten the kid” with sticks and a belt.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
75 A.D.2d 34, 428 N.Y.S.2d 375, 1980 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 10870, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-kinder-nyappdiv-1980.