Current:Home > MarketsOhio mother sentenced for leaving toddler alone to die while she went on vacation -Capitatum
Ohio mother sentenced for leaving toddler alone to die while she went on vacation
Charles H. Sloan View
Date:2025-04-11 10:32:37
An Ohio mother who left her 16-month-old daughter in a play pen while she went on vacation was sentenced on Monday to life in prison without parole for the toddler's death.
Kristel Candelario, 32, pleaded guilty in February to one count of aggravated murder and one count of endangering children in a deal with prosecutors that dropped two murder counts and a felonious assault charge.
Prosecutors said on June 6, 2023, Candelario left her daughter, Jailyn Candelario, "alone and unattended" in a playpen at her home in Cleveland for 10 days while she traveled to Puerto Rico and Detroit. When she returned, Candelario found her daughter deceased and called 911. Investigators soon found that Jailyn was "extremely dehydrated at the time of her death."
On Monday, Assistant Cuyahoga County Prosecutor Anna Faraglia presented a PowerPoint, showing the court photos of Candelario smiling and partying with friends in Puerto Rico. The prosecution also played a recording from a Ring doorbell camera of Jailyn screaming more than two days after being left at the house alone. Candelario lied to police about her vacation, and evidence later showed that she redressed her daughter before police initially came to the scene, the prosecution said.
Candelario's attorney Derek Smith said she struggled with mental health issues and had tried to kill herself by overdose in 2023, after which she was given antidepressants. Smith said she stopped taking the medication and that that influenced her judgment at the time that she left Jailyn and went on vacation.
In a statement to the court, Candelario said, "there’s so much pain that I have in regards to the loss of my baby" and that "every day I ask forgiveness from God and from my daughter, Jailyn."
“I’m extremely hurt about everything that happened," she said. "I am not trying to justify my actions, but nobody knew how much I was suffering and what I was going through."
Cuyahoga County Judge Brendan Sheehan said Candelario, through her actions, "committed the ultimate act of betrayal."
"Leaving your baby terrified, alone, unprotected to suffer what I heard was the most gruesome death imaginable with no food, no water," he said. "The evidence that I've witnessed here before this court shows that this time you simply chose not to be here because you wanted to have fun. You decided you needed a vacation and what followed was absolute depravity."
“Just as you didn't let Jailyn out of her confinement until she died … you should spend the rest of your life in a cell without freedom."
veryGood! (78)
Related
- 'Most Whopper
- Lawyers insist Nikola founder shouldn’t face prison time for fraud — unlike Elizabeth Holmes
- Ohio crash: What we know about the charter bus, truck collision leaving 6 dead, 18 injured
- A cargo plane returns to JFK Airport after a horse escapes its stall, pilot dumps 20 tons of fuel
- Head of the Federal Aviation Administration to resign, allowing Trump to pick his successor
- Robert Pattinson Reveals Why He Once Spent 6 Months Sleeping on an Inflatable Boat
- Mississippi governor rejects revenue estimate, fearing it would erode support for income tax cut
- Pennsylvania House passes ‘shield law’ to protect providers, out-of-staters seeking abortions
- Could Bill Belichick, Robert Kraft reunite? Maybe in Pro Football Hall of Fame's 2026 class
- British Foreign Secretary David Cameron meets Zelenskyy in first overseas visit as top UK diplomat
Ranking
- Could your smelly farts help science?
- Protesters in San Francisco attempted to shut down APEC summit: 'We can have a better society'
- Judge dismisses lawsuit challenging voucher-like program for private schools
- The Israeli military has set its sights on southern Gaza. Problems loom in next phase of war
- EU countries double down on a halt to Syrian asylum claims but will not yet send people back
- Senate votes to pass funding bill and avoid government shutdown. Here's the final vote tally.
- After a 'random act of violence,' Louisiana Tech stabbing victim Annie Richardson dies
- Biden announces 5 federal judicial nominees, including first Muslim American to U.S. circuit court if confirmed
Recommendation
Scoot flight from Singapore to Wuhan turns back after 'technical issue' detected
Report: Roger Waters denied hotel stays in Argentina and Uruguay over allegations of antisemitism
12 starts, $230 million: Timeline of Deshaun Watson's Browns tenure with guaranteed contract
Trump’s lawyers want a mistrial in his New York civil fraud case. They claim the judge is biased
Nearly half of US teens are online ‘constantly,’ Pew report finds
Michigan has no records of Connor Stalions filing any expense reports, FOIA request shows
FCC adopts rules to eliminate ‘digital discrimination’ for communities with poor internet access
German authorities raid properties linked to group suspected of promoting Iranian ideology