Prison for mother who killed daughter
AN Australian woman who killed her six-year-old daughter and dumped the body after years of abuse was jailed yesterday, in a case that has sparked an emotional outpouring from the community.
Kiesha Weippeart's decomposed and partially burnt body was found in a bush grave eight months after she was reported missing by her mother, Kristi Anne Abrahams, in July 2010.
Abrahams, 30, kept the child's body in a suitcase for several days before taking it by taxi to a forested area and burying it in a shallow plot.
There was evidence of sustained abuse in the months before her death, which was caused by multiple blows to the head, including one "consistent with being punched in an upward direction" which broke her teeth, said sentencing Supreme Court judge Ian Harrison.
"The offender caused the death of the deceased by the infliction of a violent, lethal force upon what was a vulnerable and defenseless child in her care who was entitled to expect and receive her protection," Harrison said, noting that Abrahams had been "publicly vilified."
"The death of a child stirs many emotions in the community, not the least of which I strongly suspect is guilt."
There were emotional scenes in court as Harrison sentenced Abrahams to a maximum 22-and-a-half years in prison - 16 without parole - for killing Kiesha and interfering with her corpse by "unceremoniously" dumping and burning it in an attempt to conceal evidence.
The killing has rocked suburban Mount Druitt in Sydney, where Abrahams lived, and a group of locals packed the courtroom for sentencing.
Abrahams' neighbor, Alison Anderson, dismissed the parallels drawn by judge Harrison between the "foreseeable and preventable" murder and Abrahams' own abuse as a child, also blaming child protection authorities for failing Kiesha.
She was taken into state care after Abrahams bit her at the age of 15 months, but was returned to her 18 months later. Kiesha attended school just four days in her short life so Abrahams could keep evidence of her injuries hidden.
"Does having a bad upbringing and abuse give you the right to go and take people's lives?" said Anderson.
"It's not good enough. We're all in shock; it's shocked the community; it's shocked everyone."
Kiesha Weippeart's decomposed and partially burnt body was found in a bush grave eight months after she was reported missing by her mother, Kristi Anne Abrahams, in July 2010.
Abrahams, 30, kept the child's body in a suitcase for several days before taking it by taxi to a forested area and burying it in a shallow plot.
There was evidence of sustained abuse in the months before her death, which was caused by multiple blows to the head, including one "consistent with being punched in an upward direction" which broke her teeth, said sentencing Supreme Court judge Ian Harrison.
"The offender caused the death of the deceased by the infliction of a violent, lethal force upon what was a vulnerable and defenseless child in her care who was entitled to expect and receive her protection," Harrison said, noting that Abrahams had been "publicly vilified."
"The death of a child stirs many emotions in the community, not the least of which I strongly suspect is guilt."
There were emotional scenes in court as Harrison sentenced Abrahams to a maximum 22-and-a-half years in prison - 16 without parole - for killing Kiesha and interfering with her corpse by "unceremoniously" dumping and burning it in an attempt to conceal evidence.
The killing has rocked suburban Mount Druitt in Sydney, where Abrahams lived, and a group of locals packed the courtroom for sentencing.
Abrahams' neighbor, Alison Anderson, dismissed the parallels drawn by judge Harrison between the "foreseeable and preventable" murder and Abrahams' own abuse as a child, also blaming child protection authorities for failing Kiesha.
She was taken into state care after Abrahams bit her at the age of 15 months, but was returned to her 18 months later. Kiesha attended school just four days in her short life so Abrahams could keep evidence of her injuries hidden.
"Does having a bad upbringing and abuse give you the right to go and take people's lives?" said Anderson.
"It's not good enough. We're all in shock; it's shocked the community; it's shocked everyone."
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