Man left toddler son to die in hot car
Justin Ross Harris deliberately left son Cooper to bake to death while he sent sexually explicit texts

Miami: A man from the southern US state of Georgia got life in prison
without possibility of parole Monday for leaving his toddler son to die
in a hot car while he sent sexually explicit messages from his office.
Justin
Ross Harris, 36, was given the maximum sentence after lead prosecutor
Chuck Boring said 22-month-old Cooper Harris perished in “the most
torturous, horrific, unimaginable way possible.”
Harris has said
that he forgot to drop his son off at daycare on June 18, 2014 and
didn’t realize he had left the boy strapped into his car seat until
after he had driven for a few minutes after leaving work.
Prosecutors had argued that Harris wanted to be free of family responsibilities.
An
investigation revealed that Harris had made Internet searches about
life without children and how to survive prison, and watched videos of
animals dying in cars in the sun.
In an unexpected twist to the
case, a police detective said Harris had texted sexually explicit
messages to six women, one of them as young as 17, while his son was
baking to his death.
A jury three weeks ago found him guilty of
charges including malice murder, cruelty to children and sexual
exploitation of children - in reference to the teenage woman he texted.
In
addition to the life term for the murder charge, Cobb County Superior
Court Judge Mary Staley Clark tacked on 32 years for the other crimes.
“The
evidence that was presented at trial and the jury’s verdict basically
says it all,” Boring said. “The evidence showed that this defendant was
driven by selfishness and committed an unspeakable act against his own
flesh and blood.”
Harris, who was wearing an orange prison
jumpsuit with his hands and ankles shackled, declined to speak at the
sentencing. He frowned throughout the proceeding but did not show any
emotion as the sentence was read out.
His attorney, Maddox Kilgore, said he planned to file a motion for a new trial.
Kilgore told The Atlanta Journal-Constitution last month that there had been “breakdowns” throughout the judicial process.
Prosecutors
did not seek the death penalty, saying there weren’t enough
“aggravating factors,” such as additional victims, in the unusual case.
Staley
Clark said she recalled Harris had told police and his ex-wife that he
hoped to be “an advocate so that people would never do this again to
their children.”
“I would say that, perhaps not in the way that you intended, you have in fact accomplished that goal,” she said.
No comments:
Post a Comment