Saturday, January 10, 2015

The Marin and McGeoghean Murders

"Nashua mother charged in death of 3-year-old daughter; Grandmother says state, court failed at-risk girl" by Jennifer Smith, Globe Correspondent  January 03, 2015

A Nashua woman was arrested Friday and charged with the death of her 3-year-old daughter, according to New Hampshire Attorney General Joseph Foster’s office.

Katlyn Marin, 25, was charged with second-degree murder for “recklessly causing the death of her daughter, Brielle Gage,” the attorney general’s office said in a statement Saturday.

Marin allegedly assaulted Brielle multiple times on or about Nov. 24 through Nov. 25, demonstrating “an extreme indifference to the value of human life,” Foster’s office said.

Nashua police responded to 14 Oak St. at about 11:30 a.m. on Nov. 25, after receiving a medical call about the girl, the attorney general’s office said in a statement. Brielle was taken to a hospital and later declared dead, officials said. The medical examiner determined the cause of death to be blunt force trauma, and the death was considered a homicide, the attorney general’s office said on Dec. 5.

“My family and I are extremely relieved that Katlyn Marin has been arrested for my granddaughter’s murder,” Sharon Boucher, Brielle’s paternal grandmother, said in a statement Saturday.

Boucher, of Manchester, N.H., thanked the police and the attorney general’s office for their determination and support, adding: “We hope that in the end, justice is truly served for my beautiful granddaughter, Brielle, who didn’t deserve to die in such a horrific manner.”

Boucher established a memorial Facebook page and a GoFundMe account to pay for Brielle’s funeral costs.

Five children, all under the age of 10, were living in the house at the time, Senior Assistant Attorney General Jeffery Strelzin said in a brief telephone interview. According to Boucher, the other four children are Brielle’s half-siblings.

Boucher said she believed Michael Rivera, 31, the father of at least one of Marin’s other children, was her live-in boyfriend. She said she would not comment on Brielle’s father, who was not identified.

Emerson Portes, a neighbor, said he would see the children in the street when he drove home from work but didn’t know the family. Marin and her family had moved into the neighborhood in the past few years, said Portes, who has lived there since 1997. He said he was shocked by the news.

Troubled by the circumstances surrounding her granddaughter’s death, Boucher said she intends to propose legislative changes to administrative rules governing the New Hampshire Division for Children Youth & Families’ authority in abuse and neglect cases.

The Division for Children Youth & Families in April had reported possible abuse of an 8-year-old boy at 14 Oak St., Nashua police said in a May 6 statement on their website. The boy had bruising on various parts of his body, the police statement said. Detectives alleged that the 8-year-old was being physically abused by Marin and Rivera, as was a 6-year-old boy who had no visible injuries, police said.

Rivera and Marin were taken into custody May 5. Rivera was charged with two counts of second-degree assault and one count of simple assault. Marin was charged with one count of second-degree assault and one count of simple assault.

The children were placed temporarily in foster care.

In a Facebook post on Saturday, Boucher said: “We want to bring awareness to the issue of child abuse and how [the Department of Health and Human Services] and the court system failed my granddaughter. She was returned to her mother last summer by family court — while felony child abuse charges were still pending against her mother and the mother’s boyfriend.”

The N.H. Division for Children Youth & Families operates under the Department of Health and Human Services.

Marin is scheduled to be arraigned Monday in the Ninth Circuit — District Division Court in Nashua, Strelzin said.

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"Accused mother faced previous charges" by Kathleen Ronayne, Associated Press  January 05, 2015

NASHUA — A woman charged with beating her 3-year-old daughter to death had faced abuse charges before.

Katlyn Marin was indicted last year on a charge of striking an 8-year-old boy with a belt, but the case was dismissed because he was too scared to testify against her, according to court papers.

Marin made her first court appearance Monday in the death of Brielle Gage. Prosecutors said the 25-year-old Marin assaulted Brielle several times during Thanksgiving week, and she died shortly after being taken to a hospital Nov. 25. An autopsy determined she died of blunt-force injuries.

Marin, who appeared on a video screen in district court in Nashua, did not speak at the hearing. Bail was not set, and she will remain behind bars pending a probable cause hearing on Jan. 13.

Marin’s father, Harry Gage, attended the brief hearing. He said that he stands behind Marin and that some of the information being spread about her was false. He said he did not want to elaborate....

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"Woman who killed her child seeks early release" by Maria Cramer, Globe Staff  January 05, 2015

NATICK — Nancy McGeoghean says she cannot remember killing her daughter.

Twenty-six years ago, McGeoghean woke up from a night of binge drinking. Her 2-year-old daughter, Sarah, lay unresponsive and blue, strapped in a car seat on the living room floor.

The young mother had strangled and smothered the child, prosecutors said.

McGeoghean was offered a deal: Plead guilty to manslaughter and she would have to spend no more than nine years behind bars. But instead she opted for a trial. Jurors found her guilty of first-degree murder, and she was given a life sentence without parole.

Now McGeoghean, 45, is being given a rare chance to persuade the state Advisory Board of Pardons to recommend she be eligible for release from the Framingham prison that has been her home for more than two decades.

On Dec. 29, McGeoghean shuffled into the board’s hearing room, shackled at the wrists and ankles.

Weeping, her voice often shaky, she struggled to explain to the four-person panel why she killed her daughter and why she could not remember the crime.

“I ask myself that every day . . . I am ashamed of myself. I am disgusted with myself,” McGeoghean said. “I loved Sarah. She was the only thing in the whole world that was mine.”

McGeoghean appeared in court wearing a blue sweater and slacks so long the cuffs got caught under her black heels; her lawyers gave her the clothes so she would not have to appear in prison garb. During the hearing — which drew many supporters, including relatives and a priest, and some detractors, including a prosecutor — McGeoghean read aloud from a letter she wrote her daughter.

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Convicted murderers seldom get a shot at freedom. A governor has not commuted a life sentence for murder since 1997, when William Weld agreed to the release of Joe Salvati, who was wrongly convicted of a mob killing.

Board officials said they were compelled to hear McGeoghean’s case by her record in prison, where she has trained service dogs and counseled other prisoners. McGeoghean’s lawyers described her sentence as unusually long, because parents who kill their children more often face manslaughter charges, not first-degree murder, and are given shorter sentences.

Life sentences for women are rarer still: Of the 1,030 inmates serving life sentences without the possibility of parole in Massachusetts, only 26 are women.

McGeoghean’s commutation hearing last week was the final one slated for the board before Governor Deval Patrick leaves office Thursday. If he approves a commutation of the sentence, the case would then go to the Governor’s Council for a vote. A yes vote would make McGeoghean eligible for parole.

But the chances of McGeoghean’s case getting to Patrick before he departs are slim; the board has not stated when it will vote on her petition.

If it does rule in her favor, the petition would probably go before Governor-elect Charlie Baker, thrusting an emotionally charged issue before a new administration.

John Cunha, one of McGeoghean’s lawyers, said he believes Baker will not let worries about political blowback obstruct his judgment.

“If she’s approved, I would expect he would take that seriously, and I expect that he would act on it favorably,” Cunha said in a telephone interview the day after the hearing. “He understands that there are times when clemency is appropriate. That’s why we have the laws and I think he would have the courage to do it.”

Tim Buckley, a spokesman for Baker, did not comment specifically on cases involving people sentenced for murder, but he said Baker would consider all petitions for pardons and commutations recommended by the board.

“If the case makes it to his desk, he will examine each case individually to make a determination,” Buckley said.

According to the petition she gave to the board and testimony at the hearing, McGeoghean, the daughter of abusive alcoholics, was 18 when she gave birth to Sarah.The child’s father, whom McGeoghean married, was a drug dealer doing time for a gun charge.

Addicted to drugs and alcohol, McGeoghean was living with her daughter in a flea-infested apartment in Cambridge in August 1988.

The night of Aug. 14, McGeoghean took her child with her as she went out drinking with friends, consuming nine to 10 beers, according to court documents.

At 5:30 a.m., McGeoghean saw her daughter was not breathing and called her husband’s parents for help. She was still drunk, the petition stated.

A medical examiner concluded that the child had been strangled with a stereo cord or wire and that she had been smothered with a pillow or someone’s hand. At trial, prosecutors said that McGeoghean killed her daughter because she feared the child would tell McGeoghean’s husband that she was seeing another man.

McGeoghean denied that motive. She rejected the manslaughter deal mainly because she said she could not believe she was capable of killing her own child. Now, she said, she knows better.

“There is no other explanation,” McGeoghean said. “I believe I killed her.”

According to a report submitted by a Lexington psychiatrist who examined her, Dr. Kathryn Porter Rapperport, McGeoghean was likely overwhelmed by the responsibility of caring for a young child, was undergoing withdrawal after heavy use of cocaine, and was anxious about her abusive husband’s pending release from prison. Those factors combined with alcohol she consumed that night support McGeoghean’s belief that she may have “just snapped,” the report stated.

The loss of her memory could have been caused by the substance abuse, heavy use of prescription drugs she took to cope with her daughter’s death, post-traumatic stress disorder, and plain denial.

Right after Sarah’s death, McGeoghean became pregnant again and gave up the baby, a boy, for adoption. She has offered to take a truth serum, go under hypnosis, or take a lie detector test to find out what happened the night of her daughter’s death.

“Why do you think you did it?” asked Charlene Bonner, acting chairwoman of the board.

McGeoghean shook her head and cried.

“Not remembering is torture to me,” she said.

The people who testified last week on her behalf described her as a quiet, respectful woman who dotes on the service dogs she trains. She has reported sexually abusive prison employees, according to her petition. Sarah’s father has signed an affidavit supporting McGeoghean’s early release.

But an aunt of the child spoke out against McGeoghean’s request, as did a prosecutor.

Assistant District Attorney Adrienne Lynch from the Middlesex district attorney’s office told the board that McGeoghean deserved to die in prison. She did not address why her office was once willing to grant McGeoghean a much shorter sentence.

“Sometimes,” Lynch told the board, “the crime is so outrageous and so egregious that the punishment of life without parole should be imposed.”

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