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Reaction to Cuneo verdict

February 19th, 2010, 5:14 pm by

For me, one poignant moment in the aftermath of today’s verdict in the trial of Jules Lynn Cuneo, was watching the coffee table that figured so prominently in the case  being wheeled out of the courtroom.

Here’s a brief video of District Attorney’s investigator Dan Edwards loading the table into a court house elevator:

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Here’s a brief video of Cuneo’s lawyer Dennis Hartley describing some of the difficulties posed by the trial (apologies for the weak audio signal. You might have to boost your speaker to hear this) :

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And finally, here’s some reaction to the verdict from the District Attorney’s spokeswoman Kathleen Walsh:

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Closings underway in Cuneo case

February 18th, 2010, 9:58 am by

Deputy District Attorney Debbie Pearson (photo by Jerilee Bennett)

The closing arguments in the first-degree murder trial of former foster mom Jules Lynn Cuneo have begun.

Cuneo is accused in the October 2007 child abuse death of 2-year-old foster child Alizé Vick.

Deputy District Attorney Debbie Pearson is explaining the elements of the charge to the jury. The courtroom is packed with spectators, include Vick’s biological mom, Ashley Susan Lindenberger.

“Ms. Cuneo had a unique position in this case,” Pearson said. “She was a foster mother.”

Pearson goes over the various statements Cuneo gave first responders who came to her home after she reported a 2-year-old girl was unconscious.

Pearson is reviewing, witness by witness, the prosecution’s case.

She recalls how Lindenberger - upon seeing her daughter that night at the hospital – said - “that’s not my girl,” describing how skinny she had become and that her hair was falling out.

Pearson recalls a statement Cuneo gave to investigator Cliff Porter, who was the lead detective in the case.

“You see those mothers on TV and now I’m in the car,” he quoted Cuneo as saying.

Pearson recalls El Paso County Coroner Dr.Robert Bux’s  testimony that Alizé died of trauma caused by blunt force.

The totality of the evidence convinced Bux the child’s death was a homicide.

“What’s there, is there,” he said of the evidence.

Pearson goes over the medical testimony in the case. Then she wraps up.

“This case is about Alizé Vick,” she said, showing a picture of the little girl. “She deserves the protection of our laws.”

“Our laws do not vary according to the kind of family you come from,” she added. “Give Alize the protection of our laws.”

“There is one person responsible,” Pearson said. “She is Jules Lynn Cuneo.”

Defense attorney Dennis Hartley (photo by Jerilee Bennett)

Defense Attorney Dennis Hartley is making his closing argument.

“The prosecution has many hypothesis,” he said. “That’s all they are, hypothesis.”

“The evidence that speaks the loudest is the lack of evidence,” he said. “The evidence that could prove the prosecution’s theory is lacking.”

He reminded jurors of the 911 call that Cuneo made to the El Paso County Sheriff’s dispatcher on Oct. 9, 2007.

She told the truth in that call, he said.

“She is too panicked to make up a story,” he said.

The prosecution’s expert medical witnesses testified that they believed the girl’s injuries were not consistent with a short fall.

But Hartley said all of those witnesses agreed with him on one point: “that short fall injuries do cause death.”

Hartley recalled the testimony of a defense witness, who described “older blood” on the brain scans that were done on the child at Memorial Hospital that night.

“Older blood, older injuries,” Hartley said.

Hartley brings up a key piece of evidence against his client, the 2-hour videotaped interview she did with Detective Porter. In that interview, Cuneo changed her story.

She initially told investigators that Alizé had fallen from her lap while they were playing “bouncy horsey” and hit the back of her head on a coffee table.

That fall did happen, Cuneo said. But when the girl would not answer questions, Cuneo admitted tossing Alizé across the living room about five feet.

“I would advise you that back at the station, Det. Porter is calling her basically a liar,” Hartley said. “Finally, he gets something from a woman who is overly helpful.”

On the tape, Cuneo later said she had said something she should not have said.

“Sure she said something she shouldn’t have said, Hartley said. “She said something that didn’t exist.”

Deputy District Attorney Stephanie Cusick talks with fellow prosecutor Debbie Pearson. (photo by Jerilee Bennett)

Deputy District Attorney Stephanie Cusick though hammered away at the interview in her rebuttal argument.

Cusick replayed the portion of the videotape where Cuneo admitted tossing Alizé.

“This case is not about an old injury,” Cusick said.

“This case is also not about short falls or two slight mishaps,” she added.

Cusick said prosecutors don’t know about an earlier incident in which Alizé tumbled out of Cuneo’s SUV face first in a Target parking lot.

But Cusick said they do know that Cuneo’s discription of an accidental fall while playing “horsey” was inaccurate.

Then she played the tape.

Jules Lynn Cuneo (photo by Jerilee Bennett)

“She wouldn’t talk to me. I was angry,” Cusick said, quoting Cuneo. “She still wouldn’t talk to me so I threw her.”

“It’s not about a lack of evidence,” Cusick said. “Think about the force it would take to cause that kind of injury.”

The statement Cuneo gave to Porter was voluntary, Cusick said.

“Nobody forced her into saying that. She talked of her own free will.”

Cusick noted that the defendant even drew pictures to explain what she did.

“She did not initially admit what happened to Alizé because she knew it was not right,” Cusick said.

Then she again showed a picture of Alizé to the juror.

“This is a case about an isolated, lonely girl who is at the mercy of this woman,” Cusick said, pointing to Cuneo.

The jury of 9 women and 3 men began deliberations around 11:30 a.m.

Stayed tuned to Gazette.com for the verdict.

Cuneo defense expert: brain injury evidence inconclusive

February 17th, 2010, 9:56 am by

Jules Lynn Cuneo (photo by Jerilee Bennett)

Good afternoon court watchers. This is John Ensslin of the Gazette, reporting to you live from the 4th Judicial District court room where the first-degree murder trial of former foster mom Jules Lynn Cuneo has resumed after a five-day hiatus.

Cuneo, 36, is accused of inflicting fatal closed head injuries to 2-year-old Alizé Vick by tossing the child in a fit of anger in the living room of Cuneo’s southern El Paso County home on Oct. 9, 2007.

Today defense attorney Dennis Hartley is presenting his case to the jury.

He has called a forensic neuropathology expert from Chicago. That expert has disputed prosecution claims that the child’s injuries were inconsistent with Cuneo’s explanation that Alizé had fallen from the foster mom’s lap and hit her head on a coffee table.

Hartley asked his expert Dr. Jan Leetsma if he could determine from microscopic slides of the child’s brain scan if the injuries were accidental or non-accidental.

“Essentially no,” Leetsma replied. “I can’t turn the time machine back and answer that important question.”

Leetsma agreed that the brain scans show an impact behind the child’s head that was most likely the result of falling backwards.

“Backwards falls are nasty,” Leetsma said. “But it doesn’t tell us anything about that backward fall – whether somebody pushed the child or the child fell.”

Hartley also showed Leetsma a photograph of a dry erase white board that investigators found as they examined the Cuneo household for evidence.

Under the heading “Alizé” the white board had a column of notes that included the words “mean”, “biting” and “sleeping.” The board also noted that Alizé had not been eating.

 The notes don’t prove anything, Leetsma. But they did make him wonder if the child had been suffering seizures prior to the injury that led to Cuneo’s arrest.

Leetsma has a kind of folksy manner in his presentation. He uses a lot of colorful metaphors and imagery to explain to the jury what they are looking at.

For example, he described the microscopic slides he examined as “salami slices” and the blood cells as “poker chip red.”

He compared analyzing Alize’s injury to a tornado hitting the courthouse building and people trying to examine the debris later to determine exactly what happened.

(Ironic side note: a microburst did hit the court house during the summer and damaged the very courtroom where the trial is taking place.)

He described his role of that of a “Monday morning quarterback” second-guess the work done during the autopsy and afterwards.

During part of Leetsma’s testimony, El Paso County Coroner Robert Bux was sitting in the audience taking notes. To continue the analogy, Bux would be the quarterback whose office Leetsma is second-guessing.

Deputy District Attonrey Debbie Pearson (photo by Jerilee Bennett)

 

Under cross-examination by Deputy District Attorney Debbie Pearson, Leetsma acknowledged there were limits to what he knows about the case. He said he can only offer opinions based upon the historical records of the case.

“At some point, a consulting pathologist, such as myself, can’t really beat the bushes and look at those historical things,” he said.

He also said he was not familiar with all the details of an interview in which Cuneo admitted to a sheriff’s investigator that she threw the child across the room with enough force that she landed about five feet away on the other side of the coffee table.

He also disclosed his expert witness fees, which are about $400 per hour for consulting and $600 per hour for sworn testimony.

 The trial has taken a lunch break. I’ll be covering another unrelated criminal case this afternoon, so this live blog will be on pause until later this afternoon.

Live blog: Cuneo friend recalls phone calls

February 10th, 2010, 2:07 pm by

This is John Ensslin at the Gazette.

 

Testimony has resumed in the first-degree murder trial of Jules Lynn Cuneo.

 

Cuneo is the 36-year-old El Paso County woman accused in the October 2007 child abuse death of Alize Vick, a 2-year-old foster child.

 

I’ll be live blogging the trial this afternoon.

 

The first witness is Andrea Cohn, a woman who befriended Cuneo in their junior year of high school.

 

After drifting apart for several years after graduation, they reconnected in 2004. The two stay-at-home moms had shared interests.

 

In September 2007, Cuneo was raising her two twin daughters plus foster children Alize and her younger brother.

 

When asked about Cuneo’s demeanor during that time, Cohn said: “She seemed a little bit – I wouldn’t say stressed out – but with the coming of the school year, spread thin.”

 

On Oct. 9, 2007, Cuneo called Cohn to tell her that Alize had tumbled out of Cuneo’s vehicle in the parking lot of a Target store.

 

“She was concerned. It didn’t seem like an emergency situation at the time,” Cohn said.

 

There were two more calls from Cuneo that night, Cohn said.

 

She called while on her way to Memorial Hospital, where Alize had been airlifted.

 

Cohen said Cuneo told her the girl had fallen from her lap and hit a table.

 

The next call came around 2 a.m. Oct. 10, 2007.

 

At that time, Cuneo asked her friend if she knew someone who could help her post bond.

 

Alize died later that same day of a closed head injury.

 

Jury sees Cuneo home interior

February 9th, 2010, 3:17 pm by

Jurors in the Jules Lynn Cuneo first-degree murder trial are looking at a series of photographs over her southern El Paso County home as it appeared on Oct. 9, 2007.

 

That’s the night she called Sheriff’s deputies to her home at 11580 Calle Corvo on a report of an unconscious two-year-old foster child.

 

The child, Alize Vick died the next day. Cuneo, 36, told deputies the girl had fallen from her lap and hit her head on a coffee table.

 

The series of photographs taken by crime scene investigators show a somewhat cluttered household with clothes piled on a couch and boxes stacked against a wall. There is a large dog in some of the pictures. Several shots also show the coffee table.

 

The photographs also showed the Ford Expedition, out of which Alizé allegedly had tumbled earlier that day, landing a parking lot outside a Target store.

 

One photograph of a dry eraser white board showed the name “Alize” on the top of a column of words that included “accident” “mean” “biting” and “sleeping.”

 

Under cross examination by Cuneo’s attorney Dennis Hartley, the crime scene investigator testified that the floor around the coffee table had plush carpet.

 

Jurors also saw pictures taken by investigators two days later after someone apparently had cleaned up the house.

 

That prompted a question from a juror who questioned why the house was no longer treated like a crime scene. The investigator replied that they relinquished the house back to the homeowner after investigators were done that first night.

Live blog: the foster mom murder trial

February 9th, 2010, 10:09 am by

Good morning court watchers.

 

This morning I’m live blogging from the first-degree murder trial of Jules Lynn Cuneo.

 

She’s the 36-year-old former foster mom accused in the October 2007 child abuse death of 2-year-old Alizé Vick.

 

So far, this morning, jurors have heard from a sheriff’s deputy who responded to Cuneo’s home after she made a 911 call on Oct. 9, 2007 to report that the child was unconscious. The girl died the next day.

 

The deputy testified that Cuneo’s demeanor during the incident ranged from calm to hysterical to distressed.

 

At the moment, a radiologist from Memorial Hospital is explaining brain scans taken of Vick before she died.

 

Dr. Stacy Greenspan is describing the bleeding on the brain that the scans uncovered.

 

Greenspan said the type of injuries she found were not the kind that would after resulted from the child bumping her head on a coffee table or falling out of a car.

 

Those are two of the explanations Cuneo gave to deputies shortly after the incident.

 

Under cross-examination by Cuneo’s lawyer Dennis Hartley, Greenspan acknowledged she did not know the rate of the impact that would have resulted from either fall.

 

The Cuneo interview

February 8th, 2010, 10:34 am by

People have this idea from television shows like “The Closer” that interrogations with murder suspects go a certain way.

 

Usually, the detective browbeats the suspect or tricks them with a line of questioning and shazam, there’s a confession right before the commercial break.

 

In real life, it doesn’t quite go that way.

 

Take El Paso County Sheriff’s Investigator Cliff Porter’s Oct. 9, 2007 interview with Jules Lynn Cuneo. Captured on video tape, it was a two-hour plus study in patience and persistence.

 

Porter started out slow, asking a lot of open-ended questions of Cuneo several hours after she had called 911 to report her 2-year-old foster child was unconscious. The child died the next day.

 

He also obtained some interesting biographical detail, such as the fact that Cuneo had five children who died in utero. Her twins were the survivors of a set of quadruplets.

 

He began by focusing on the foster child, Alizé Vick and her biological parents.

 

Cuneo told him that Alizé was named after a brand of liquor. She told him how Alizé was afraid of people, especially men. She claimed that the girl was less playful after visiting her grandmother and couldn’t stand to be separated from Cuneo.

 

But then about an hour into the interview, Porter pivoted and confronted Cuneo with two facts that he said did not add up.

 

First the severe injuries the child had sustained were inconsistent with a two-foot-fall out of Cuneo’s lap.

 

Second there was no way all the events Cuneo described – Alizé falling in a Target parking lot, coming home, changing clothes and the fall – could have occurred over the span of 20 minutes as she claimed.

 

Porter began turning up the heat, suggesting that as a single mom with four kids – two foster children and two of her own – was under extraordinary stress and thus might have shaken the girl.

 

“No sir, that is not what happened,” Cuneo replied. “I understand what you’re saying and I’m telling you the truth.”

 

Cuneo claimed to have no reason to lie. Porter pointed out that she did: “a little two-year-old baby with major brain damage is lying in a hospital,” he said.

 

“I don’t think you’re being honest about how Alizé received her injury,” he told her point blank.

 

“So what do you want me to do? To say that I’m guilty,” Cuneo asked.

 

“I think you made a mistake and you hurt the child,” he replied.

 

They went back and forth like this for several minutes.

 

Porter told Cuneo, “I’m not here to judge you.

 

Cuneo replied, “You’re doing your job, I appreciate that.”

 

Finally Cuneo started to budge off her original story.

 

“I’m thinking back,” she said. “Am I allowed to do that?”

 

Porter quoted Carl Jung and his theory of collective unconscious. Sometimes people’s minds protect them from hard facts by creating a memory that is fuzzy.

 

He encouraged her to start over with a clean slate and tell him what happened.

 

Out it came.

 

“I…I…I pushed her,” Cuneo stammered.

 

“So you pushed her out of anger, is that fair to say?” Porter asked.

 

“Mmmm hmm,” she replied.

 

“The fact that you made a mistake doesn’t mean you’re a bad person,” he offered.

 

“Yes it does,” she said.

 

Still, the details emerged fitfully as Porter continued to prod.

 

“A throw is very different than a push,” he told her. “You and I both know that.”

 

“I’m terrified,” she said. “I’m really scared right now because I don’t know what you’re going to do to me.”

 

Porter tried to be understanding.

 

“You’re no Al Capone right?” he asked. “I understand your fear….You made a mistake when you weren’t completely truthful up front.”

 

Porter encouraged her to start over again, and out came many of the statements you’ll find in my story on the trial. Click here.

 

 

 

 

 

 

Jurors hear 911 tape in foster mom murder trial

February 4th, 2010, 11:31 am by

A distraught Jules Lynn Cuneo called 911 pleading for help “for my baby,” a 2-year-old foster child who would later die of head injuries.

Jules Lynn Cuneo listens to testimony during her first-degree murder trial. (Photo by Jerilee Bennett)

Jules Lynn Cuneo listens to testimony during her first-degree murder trial. (Photo by Jerilee Bennett)

 

 

 

“She fell,” said a breathless Cuneo, a 36-year-old El Paso County woman who had been entrusted with the care of Alize Vick and her younger brother Anthoni.

 

El Paso County dispatcher Lisa Carrigan tried to calm Cuneo down while getting information.

 

“You’re going to hyperventilate. Take a deep breath,” Carrigan told Cuneo. “Is she conscious?”

 

“I don’t know,” Cuneo replied. She could be heard saying “Alize, talk to mom.”

 

“Alize, it’s mommy,” Cuneo added. “Alize can you hear mommy?”

 

Carrigan asked Cuneo what had happened.

 

“We were playing in the living room,” Cuneo replied. “She fell out of my lap. She fell backwards and hit the table.”

 

Cuneo told the dispatcher that the girl wasn’t talking and that her breathing was shallow.

 

The conversation grew chaotic as Carrigan again tried to calm Cuneo down.

 

“I really think the kids (Cuneo’s twin daughters and Anthoni Vick) are freaking out because you’re freaking out,” Carrigan said. “I need you to take a deep breath and not freak out when the fire ighters arrived.”

 

The first firefighter arrived a few minutes later. Paramedics airlifted the child by helicopter to Memorial Hospital, where she died the following day.

 

Defense: others could have killed foster child

February 4th, 2010, 11:12 am by

Defense attorney Dennis Hartley outlines some of the medical evidence during opening arguments in the first-degree murder trial of Jules Lynn Cuneo. (Photo by Jerilee Bennett)

Defense attorney Dennis Hartley outlines some of the medical evidence during opening arguments in the first-degree murder trial of Jules Lynn Cuneo. (Photo by Jerilee Bennett)

Other people could have inflicted the blows to the head that killed 2-year-old foster child Alize Vick, a defense attorney said at the start of the child abuse/murder trial of Jules Lynn Cuneo.

In opening arguments, Cuneo’s lawyer Dennis Hartley told jurors that the evidence will show that Vick’s injuries could have occurred between three hours to 10 days prior to the 911 call that brought emergency personnel to Cuneo’s home in southern El Paso County on Oct. 9, 2007.

 

Vick was born into “a very, very dysfunctional family,” Hartley told the jurors. Both her parents had been jailed.

After six referrals, the El Paso County Department of Social Services took Alize and her 9-month-old brother Anthoni into custody, Hartley said. 

Through a placement agency, the children were sent to live with Cuneo and her twin daughters.

 

“You’ll hear testimony that Alize Vick was very disruptive. Her way of dealing with people was not in conformance with the norm,” Hartley said.

 

“Mrs. Cuneo had done a lot of work to get her (Alize) to where she was not afraid of people,” Hartley said.

 

“Generally she was doing a fine job,” he said.

 

Hartley said one question that needs to be answered during the trial is why did Alize die?

 

Cuneo told investigators that the child fell backwards out of her lap and hit her head on a table. Coroners ruled the caused of death was a closed head injury.

 

Hartley said there will be testimony challenging “this nonsense” that a short fall injury could not be fatal.

 

On an easel, Hartley sketched out what the defense medical experts will have to say about the girl’s injuries.

 

He said testimony will show that the child’s brain could not swell within one hour to the degree documented by the first scan at Memorial Hospital.

 

“What does that mean?” he said. “It means there was on ongoing process to an old injury that may have been re-aggravated by the fall.”

 

He also said Alize was suffering from “respirator brain”, a result of the oxygen she was placed on at the hospital. Hartley said that condition made it problematic to evaluate the injuries that led to her death.

 

“What we have in this case is that there are many holes that can’t be filled,” Hartley said.

 

“We are unable to determine whether this was an accident, an inflicted injury or when the injury took place.”

 

 

 

 

 

 

Prosecutor: foster mom pushed child in anger

February 4th, 2010, 10:05 am by

Jules Lynn Cuneo admitted that she pushed a 2-year-old foster child “with anger”, inflicting a head injury that would cause her death, a prosecutor said this morning.

Deputy District Attorney Stephanie Cusick talks with fellow prosecutor Debbie Pearson during the first day of testimony in the first-degree murder trial of Jules Lynn Cuneo. (Photo by Jerilee Bennett)

Deputy District Attorney Stephanie Cusick talks with fellow prosecutor Debbie Pearson during the first day of testimony in the first-degree murder trial of Jules Lynn Cuneo. (Photo by Jerilee Bennett)

 

 

 

 

Deputy District Attorney Stephanie Cusick told jurors in opening arguments that Cuneo was responsible for the fatal injuries to Alize Vick.

 

Vick was a youngster who loved Dora the Explorer. She and her younger brother Anthoni had been placed with Cuneo as foster kids.

 

Cuneo called 911 on Oct. 9, 2007 at 6:50 p.m. to report that Vick was unconscious. When the first firefighter arrived to Cuneo’s home at 11580 Calle Corvo near Fort Carson, he found her on the porch and Vick on a bed dressed in a diaper.

 

Vick was unresponsive.

 

“He knew it was serious,” Cusick said. “He knew something was seriously wrong.”

 

Paramedics rushed the girl by helicopter to Memorial Hospital, where the doctor who examined her saw the child’s pupils were fixed and dilated.

 

“He immediately recognized that her injuries were very serious,” Cusick told the jurors. “He also decided this is not the kind of injury that would happen in an innocent fall.”

 

Later Cuneo would tell Sheriff’s investigator Cliff Porter during a two-hour interview that the girl had fallen from her lap and hit her head on a table.

 

“Eventually the defendant admits that that she pushed Alize down out of anger,” Cusick said.

 

Vick died the next day. An autopsy would show that she died of a closed head injury. She had bruising and bleeding of the brain.

 

Cusick said doctors will testify that the extent of the injuries were inconsistent with the short fall that Cuneo described.

 

“Ladies and gentlemen, this is a case about an isolated little girl,” Cusick said, asking them to find Cuneo guilty of first-degree murder.