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ANGELICA ELLIS - Newborn (2006) - Providence RI

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ANGELICA ELLIS - Newborn (2006) - Providence RI Empty ANGELICA ELLIS - Newborn (2006) - Providence RI

Post by TomTerrific0420 Wed Sep 16, 2009 1:41 pm

A 33-year-old
North Providence woman was sentenced to serve 25 years in prison
Tuesday for murdering her newborn daughter in the bathroom of her
parents’ home.Julie Robat’s sentencing hearing before Judge
Robert Krause in Providence County Superior Court drew impassioned
arguments from lawyers on both sides and prompted a Catholic priest to
ask Krause for mercy.Krause, who had access to a stack of
letters that family members and others wrote on Robat’s behalf,
sentenced the woman to a 45-year prison term, with 25 to serve, instead
of 50 years, with 30 to serve that prosecutors had sought.“You
criminally caused the life of a child to be snuffed out,” Krause told
Robat. “And for that egregious transgression, meaningful punishment has
to be imposed.” In October 2006, the defendant’s baby, Angelica
A. Robat Ellis, was found inside a plastic garbage bag underneath a
laundry appliance in the Lori Drive home where Julie Robat lived with
her parents, Charles and Francine Robat, and two sisters.At
trial in April, Robat testified that she never realized she was
pregnant and that she could not even remember giving birth, saying she
felt a sharp pain in her stomach, saw blood in the toilet, fell down,
hit her head and passed out.Her two sisters testified that she made a trip to the family’s laundry room around the same time.The
prosecution accused her of either neglecting her newborn to the point
that the baby died from asphyxiation due to exposure, asphyxiating the
baby inside a plastic bag or asphyxiating the infant by holding her too
tightly. The jury convicted Robat of second-degree murder.On
Tuesday, Special Assistant Attorney General Molly K. Cote called her “a
cold-hearted and callous killer of a newborn baby,” and urged the judge
to disregard the letters that Robat’s family members had submitted to
the court on her behalf.Cote said Robat’s family, who wrote the
court prior to sentencing, are so supportive of her that they enable
her to deny her crime.“The state can simply not ignore the role
they seem to play in an ongoing theme of denial and lack of
accountability by the defendant,” Cote said.In one letter to the
court, family members “really did nothing else but blame Tommy Ellis
[the baby’s father] for this crime and point the finger at him,” Cote
said, adding that the family’s letters “are ripe with reasons and
explanations and justifications of why the defendant should not be held
accountable for her crimes.”“For example, the state’s evidence
wasn’t good, it wasn’t consistent, or many doctors have told us that
this couldn’t have been the defendant’s fault,” Cote said.The
court received numerous letters from community members on Robat’s
behalf, including North Providence Mayor Charles A. Lombardi, Cote said.Court
spokesman Craig Berke said the court cannot provide public access to
the letters because they are part of a presentencing report, which is
confidential under the court’s rules.Robat’s lawyer, Paul
DiMaio, asked for a lighter sentence, noting that the jury’s verdict
never clarified whether Robat’s newborn died from her failure to
provide care to the baby or from her own deliberate actions to
suffocate the infant.The defendant, crying, stood and apologized for the pain and anguish she had caused everyone around her.“My
tears are not for myself,” she said, reading from a statement. “They
are for my baby, who never knew that I am truly sorry for all of this.”
The Rev. Michael Skrocki, pastor of a Danbury, Conn., parish
told Krause that he has known Robat for 15 years; he had earlier been
assigned to her family’s parish in Lincoln.He described her as a
caring person who was active in charity work . He also said that Robat
anguishes daily over her baby’s death.“This is not an uncaring
person,” Skrocki told Krause. “This is not the dark, malicious,
uncaring person that the prosecutor has painted here … if as the
prosecutor says, there has been no mercy in this case, yet, I would ask
that on this day some mercy be shown and that a lighter sentence be
given.”Krause told Robat that she had a good family who would
have helped her care for her baby, but she wrongly chose to keep her
pregnancy a secret and lied to hospital physicians and others in an
attempt to conceal that she had given birth. “Not to impose a
substantial jail sentence … would simply devalue the life of a child,”
Krause said. “No civilized society is prepared to do that and neither
am I.”Assistant Attorney General J. Patrick Youngs said that Robat could be eligible for parole in about eight years. Outside
on the court’s steps, Attorney General Patrick C. Lynch praised
Krause’s handling of the case and challenged those family members who
have questioned the verdict.“Those who would deny it are trying
to diminish even further the few breaths of air that this little baby
took in before its life was snuffed out by this defendant,” Lynch said.
“Again, that’s unforgivable and criminal, but to suggest that it’s not
a crime is just quite simply ignoring the process, ignoring the jury
and ignoring the judge.”
TomTerrific0420
TomTerrific0420
Supreme Commander of the Universe With Cape AND Tights AND Fancy Headgear
Supreme Commander of the Universe With Cape AND Tights AND Fancy Headgear

Job/hobbies : Searching for Truth and Justice

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