woman charged with child endangerment

javapride

New Member
Joined
Apr 5, 2003
Messages
6,511
Reaction score
0
this woman SHOULDN T EVEN be BREAST FEEDING while DRIVING SHEESH !


RAVENNA, Ohio (Aug. 9) - A woman who belonged to an obscure religious sect was found innocent Friday of child endangerment for breast-feeding her baby while driving, but was convicted of three lesser charges.

Catherine Nicole Donkers, 29, was found guilty of violating child-restraint laws, driving without a valid driver's license and fleeing police while on the Ohio Turnpike in May.

Prosecutors recommended Donkers be sentenced to 30 days in jail and a $500 fine instead of the maximum one year in jail and $2,000.

Judge Donald Martell said he would postpone sentencing to investigate Donkers ``because I feel I need to know more about you.'' He issued his ruling after closing arguments in a three-day trial and did not schedule a sentencing date.

Child endangerment was the most serious charge she faced. Martell said his ruling reflected state troopers' testimony that they only saw Donkers holding the baby, not breast-feeding.

Donkers, who represented herself, and her husband, Brad Lee Barnhill, belong to a religion they say requires Barnhill to be responsible for punishing Donkers.

Donkers had said she did nothing wrong and was following her husband's orders while she drove alone with the baby from Pennsylvania to Michigan.

``We are people who do not shirk from facing the consequences of our actions. I pray that this court respects my faith,'' Donkers said in closing arguments.

Donkers argued that as a Michigan resident, she was entitled under that state's child restraint law to breast-feed while driving, even though she was driving in Ohio when she was stopped. Child restraint laws in Michigan exempt nursing babies.

But prosecutor Sean Scahill said Donkers should be punished for endangering the child's life because the baby could have been killed even in a minor accident.

``She placed that infant between herself and the steering wheel, between herself and the air bag,'' Scahill said.

Donkers said Thursday that for a short time she took both hands off the wheel to move the 7-month-old girl while the car drove in cruise control at 65 mph.

``I don't believe there was any form of recklessness,'' she said.

Donkers testified that she had stopped earlier on May 8 at a highway rest stop and fed cereal to the baby, a girl named Seren Barnhill. Donkers said she realized the baby was still hungry after she got back on the road.

``I called my husband, and he directed me to continue on, to drive to Michigan and nurse my child in the car,'' Donkers said.

``It certainly isn't a primary choice as a form of feeding my child. I certainly had no intent to harm my child. I never would,'' she said.

Donkers and Barnhill - who lack a marriage license but claim to be married - belong to the First Christian Fellowship for Eternal Sovereignty, which has a history of challenging the government.

The organization, which pledges allegiance to Jesus Christ, was founded in Henderson, Nev., in the 1990s. Barnhill says he is a minister in the fellowship, which has 650 followers.

State police had pursued Donkers for several miles on the northeast Ohio highway before she stopped. She insisted on speaking to her husband before cooperating.

Testimony from a state trooper said Donkers had what appeared to be a homemade Pennsylvania identification card instead of a driver's license.

After the ruling, Barnhill said Martell was fair.

``He doesn't know us. He wants to know more about us. I think his concern is that this doesn't happen again,'' Barnhill said.

Barnhill said the couple was living temporarily in Pittsburgh for work, but Donkers was a resident of Livonia, Mich., when arrested.

08/08/03 14:18 EDT

Copyright 2003 The Associated Press. The information contained in the AP news report may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or otherwise distributed without the prior written authority of The Associated Press. All active hyperlinks have been inserted by AOL.
 
I know...I heard about it on the news and was appalled on what the mother said and how she reacted to it. Just couldn't believe that she followed her husband's orders in breastfeeding her baby WHILE driving, that's stupid. Obviously, she didn't have any common sense to simply PULL OVER and stop to breast feed, simple as that. :dunno:
 
that's almost impossible to drive and breast feed the baby at the same time!

it is the law to put TWO hands on the steering wheel for better driving or she proably would lose control of the car with just one hand on the wheel, and would proably hit something...

so that was kinda stupid though
 
Steel said:
that's almost impossible to drive and breast feed the baby at the same time!

it is the law to put TWO hands on the steering wheel for better driving or she proably would lose control of the car with just one hand on the wheel, and would proably hit something...

so that was kinda stupid though

There's no law, that i know of, that says you gotta to use two hands on the steering wheel. If there were one....it's discriminating people with one limb. :p
 
Steel said:
that's almost impossible to drive and breast feed the baby at the same time!

it is the law to put TWO hands on the steering wheel for better driving or she proably would lose control of the car with just one hand on the wheel, and would proably hit something...

so that was kinda stupid though
:confused: I think I am driving better if I use only one hand instead of two hands on steering wheel. :D
 
Well, if there isn't, then it was proably just a STATE law, anyway...or perhas one of the rules about driving. I always hold two hands on the wheel for better driving than just one hand on the wheel...it would be alittle difficult to turn that way with just one hand so i perfer to do it with two hands anyway.
 
Back
Top