death penalty news

June 8, 2004


FLORIDA:

Death-penalty case not seen for mom

A mother accused of killing her toddler daughter will not be charged with 
first-degree murder, prosecutors indicate.

The young mother accused in last month's beating death of her 3-year-old 
daughter will not be charged with first-degree murder -- which could have 
exposed her to the death penalty.

At an arraignment today, Miami-Dade County prosecutors are expected to 
charge Yusimil Herrera, 20, with second-degree murder in the death of Angel 
Hope, who died May 19. If convicted of the lesser charge, Herrera faces a 
maximum of 20 years in prison.

DAUGHTER BORN

The news came several hours before Herrera gave birth to another daughter, 
Stephanie Angela, at Jackson Memorial Hospital's prison ward D.

''Obviously, the state felt they were short of proving first-degree murder 
and reduced the charges,'' said Herrera's criminal attorney, Mark Eiglarsh. 
``I think things are moving in the right direction.''

Ed Griffith, spokesman for the state attorney's office, said ''reduced'' is 
not the right term.

''Police had probable cause to charge her with first-degree, but we had not 
charged her yet,'' he said. A key element in a first-degree charge is 
premeditation, he added.

Assistant State Attorney Josh Weintraub, lead prosecutor on the case, 
indicated at a hearing Monday before Circuit Judge Scott Silverman that 
Herrera would face second-degree, not first-degree, murder charges. 
Weintraub could not be reached for comment later Monday.

Angel Hope was found battered and bruised in a North Miami apartment on May 
16. She never regained consciousness and was taken off life support two 
days later. The charges against her mother were upgraded to murder.

CHILD ABUSE

The girl's death came two months after a judge ruled there were no grounds 
to take her into protective custody, despite several complaints to the 
Department of Children and Families that Herrera was abusing the child.

Herrera and her sister grew up in the DCF's foster-care system and became 
the poster child for the failings of Florida's child welfare system. In 
1999, a Miami jury awarded the sisters $4.4 million for their suffering, 
though the award was later reduced to $400,000.

NEW BABY'S FATHER

The biological father of Herrera's new baby, Tomas Medrano, wants custody 
of the child. A court order allowed him to be present at the baby's birth, 
Eiglarsh said.

Eiglarsh said he also plans to soon file a motion asking Judge Silverman to 
recuse himself from the case on the grounds the judge's wife is a state 
attorney's office employee and is supervised by Weintraub.

Griffith said: ``Anyone can file a motion for anything.''

(source: The Miami Herald)

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