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Children Killed and Injured in Daycare: U.S. Court Jails a Nigerian Woman to 80 Years


U.S. - A Houston jury has reached a decision on the sentencing phase of the trial against Jessica Tata, a daycare owner whose home caught fire, killing and injuring several children.

On November 13, Tata was found guilty of murdering 16-month-old Elias Castillo and sentenced to 80 years in prison.
Tata, 24, left children in a home on Crest Park near Waypark alone with a pan of grease heating on a stove while she went shopping on Feb. 24, 2011. When she got home, the house was on fire. Elias, Shomari Dickerson, 3, Elizabeth Kojah, 20 months, and Kendyll Stradford, 20 months, all died in the fire. Three
other children were hurt.
Jurors took eight hours to decide on punishment. Tata will be eligible for parole in 30 years.
Tata wiped away tears as her attorney, Mike DeGeurin, said the fire and deaths were an accident. He said Tata made a mistake and never intended for the children to be hurt because she loved them.
"She should have called for help or she should have said to herself, 'I'll wait until they wake up, change their diapers, I'll load them up in the car and we'll go to Target together,'" DeGeurin said. "But she didn't."
DeGeurin said that Tata will pay forever, no matter how long she spends in prison, for using bad judgment.
"She thought, 'They'll be fine. I'll be back in 20 to 30 minutes and they'll be fine.' That is where she was wrong and that is where she's going to live with that decision for the rest of her life. She mourns for those children," DeGeurin said.
Assistant District Attorney Connie Spence said there was evidence that Tata left the children home alone in the past. She said the children came second to Tata's personal desires.
"If that was the first time she had ever left those babies alone, she would be in a hurry," Spence said. "She would be panicked, thinking, 'OK, I need to get home. I need to get home.' She made her life the priority, not those babies. She was going to do what she needed to do and work around the babies."
DeGeurin urged the jury to not let emotions be the driving force in how many years they decide Tata should spend in prison.
"Guard against being whipped up into emotion and doing something out of anger," DeGeurin said.
"What we want is justice," Spend said. "Not vengeance."
Prosecutors pushed for the maximum sentence.
"What's a child's life worth? How can you put a number on a child's life? They will never be back, and what could have been will never be," Spence said.
As attorney's went over the evidence for the last time in this trial, Elias' and Shomari's mothers held hands and wept.
Jurors heard from several witnesses during the punishment phase, including Tata's sister and the victim's mother.
After the fire but before she was charged, Tata went to Nigeria. She was arrested in that country in March 2011 and returned to the United States. Tata was born in the U.S. but has Nigerian citizenship.
Tata's sister, Jennifer, told jurors that her sister was distraught after the fire.
Jennifer Tata said her sister went to Nigeria after she was released from the hospital to talk with her father. Jennifer Tata said her sister had no intention of not returning to the United States.
Along with her sentence, Tata was ordered to pay a USD 10,000 fine. She still faces three more counts of murder for the other children who died, three counts of abandoning a child and two counts of reckless injury for the survivors.

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