A 31-year-old Utah mother was arrested and charged with the murder of her 6-year-old son, who was found unresponsive in the family’s home on Feb. 25.
The child was rushed to the hospital but died two days later.
Detectives probing the case found enough evidence to lead to the arrest and charging of Reyna Elizabeth Flores-Rosales.
Doctors also found a slew of other injuries, including burns on the boy’s buttocks, scars, and bruises.
“There is not an accidental explanation for all of the above injuries,” a doctor told police, according to the Tribune.
“A CT scan was performed and significant head trauma was revealed,” the Sandy Police Department said in a statement. Doctors at Primary Children’s confirmed that the injuries to the head “were caused by a person in one single event,” and ruled out an accident as a possible cause. “They compared the damage and the bleeding on the brain to what is seen in shaken baby syndrome.”
The case shook responding officers and medics.
Flores-Rosales was previously investigated for suspected child abuse. She was also convicted in 2015 of felony drug distribution, resulting in probation.
Flores-Rosales was arrested on Feb. 26 and was charged with murder on March 7. She’s also facing aggravated sexual abuse of a child and child abuse.
Federal immigration authorities have placed an immigration hold on Floras-Rosales, a Honduran national, indicating that she is in the country illegally.
A warrant was issued previously for Flores-Rosales to be released to immigration officials for deportation but the warrant was recalled in September 2018.
If she is cleared of the charges, or if she is sentenced but ultimately released after time served, immigration authorities would deport her.
Child Abuse
According to a report published by the U.S. Department of Health & Human Services (pdf), approximately 3.5 million children nationwide in 2016 were the subjects of at least one maltreatment report to authorities.“Child abuse is one of the nation’s most serious concerns,” the authors wrote in the introduction. About 17 percent of those reports were substantiated; the department said that there were an estimated 676,000 victims of child abuse and neglect, or 9.1 victims per 1,000 children.
Children in their first year of life had the highest rate of victimization at 24.8 per 1,000 children of the same age in the national population.
About three-quarters of the cases were neglect while about 18 percent were physical abuse. Some children suffered from multiple forms of maltreatment.
Of the perpetrators of the abuse, more than four-fifths were between the ages of 18 and 44 and more than half were women.