http://www.daytondailynews.com/news/crime/jurors-find-mom-guilty-of-killing-baby-in-microwave-oven-1159761.html
DAYTON — Jurors today convicted a mother accused of killing her baby in a microwave oven, her third trial on the charges.
China Arnold, 31, was convicted of aggravated murder in the death of 28-day-old Paris Talley on Aug. 30, 2005, at her home at 415 Hall Ave. in the since-demolished Parkside Homes public housing complex. Arnold, who cried when the verdict was read, could face the death penalty.
The sentencing phase of the trial begins Monday.
The jury of 11 women and one man received the case about 4:30 p.m. Thursday, then deliberated until 8 p.m. before breaking for the night. The jury resumed deliberations about 8:30 p.m. Friday and arrived at the verdict just after 11 a.m.
Crystal McGhee, Arnold’s aunt, said that she did not believe Arnold could get a fair trial in Dayton due to pre-trial publicity.
“She was a good mother,” McGhee said. “I watched her raise her children.”
Bishop Richard Cox, the president of the Dayton chapter of the Southern Christian Leadership Conference, attended the trial daily.
“We still believe she is innocent,” Cox said. “She needs to be set free.”
The closing arguments and the jury instructions given by Montgomery County Common Pleas Judge Mary Wiseman took up nearly all of Thursday afternoon.
“Baby Paris is without life, but she’s not without a voice,” assistant county prosecutor Dan Brandt told the jury during his closing argument. “Please listen to her.”
Brandt said that Arnold’s actions were “even more purposeful” than a slaying with a gun or a knife. Arnold had to carry the baby over, place her in the microwave, shut the door, then press buttons. Then she waited while her child cooked to death, Brandt said.
“If that’s not purposeful, what is?” Brandt asked.
Arnold admitted to police that the baby woke her up about 2:30 a.m., Brandt said. She also told police that she was alone, beside her other children, who were asleep upstairs, Brandt said. There were no signs of a break-in, Brandt said.
“She eliminated everyone else,” Brandt said.
Defense attorney Jon Paul Rion attacked the case and said that the evidence pointed as much to Terrell Talley, the baby’s father, as it did Arnold.
“This doesn’t make sense to you,” Rion said. “It doesn’t. I’ve been watching your faces.”
He said the prosecutor cut and fit evidence to show “this loving mother somehow was so evil that she killed her baby in this way.”
Rion said that testimony from Talley that Arnold said “I killed my baby” left out crucial context that she meant she failed as a mother by allowing the crime to happen, not that she did it herself. His voice breaking, Rion noted that several of the women on the jury were mothers and asked “wouldn’t you feel personally responsible?”
He also said that testimony about the key used to lock Arnold in the house alone with her children was a fiction.
“This key story is an alibi,” Rion said. “It was created six months later.”
Rion also said that Arnold was very intoxicated, having drank half of a bottle of Bacardi 151 Rum.
“No mother is going to do this, in this way,” Rion said. “China Arnold is innocent of these charges.”
Assistant county Prosecutor David Franceschelli then gave the final closing argument, ridiculing Arnold as “the mother of the year.”
Franceschelli said that there was no testimony that the matter on the shoes was a bodily substance, nor was there any evidence presented as to the exact amounts of rum Arnold drank. He also said that three other witnesses corroborated Terrell Talley’s account of giving a key to his sister to check on Arnold and the baby, then lock the door.
“Everyone’s lying except the defendant,” Franceschelli said. “That’s what you have to believe. Everybody’s lying but her, and she couldn’t tell the same story twice.”
The trial opened April 25, but jury selection took six and half days, much of it dealing with death penalty attitudes, the effects of pre-trial publicity and availability for a four-week trial.
The first trial ended in February 2008 in a mistrial after the boy came forward - after the defense had rested - and said he saw another child put the baby in the oven. The boy was 5 in August 2005.
Arnold was convicted of all charges in September 2008 and sentenced to life without parole. The Ohio Second District Court of Appeals reversed that conviction in November, focusing on issues surrounding Williams’ testimony.