rita
substitute soccer mom
She is too bitch, I totally agree...lolMy mother is "too bitch", you're right.
She is too bitch, I totally agree...lolMy mother is "too bitch", you're right.
Sorry, babe. I run a website for missing blacks.This is probli a all white group anyway,u dummies know nothing that happens in the black community and whoever said my posts where dumb ur mother is too bitch fk this racist dumb ass forum i am out.Like i said everybody fucked up assholes
I'm confused. Horrific spelling is plaguing the black communities and us white folk can't understand it?This is probli a all white group anyway,u dummies know nothing that happens in the black community and whoever said my posts where dumb ur mother is too bitch fk this racist dumb ass forum i am out.Like i said everybody fucked up assholes
I agreed with the first post, but I don't understand this one. Link me to where he said that he was waiting on the call to kill her.The daughter she never wanted from the start,she said she had no help so she probli looked at Shaniya as more of a burden then the precious little girl she was,so she decided in her mind i cannot let nyone find out about this cause surley Shaniya would tell,so she told Mario to go ahead n kill her,he said something really strange in the interview with policd,he says i waitex for the call to come kill her,but then changed his story.And if he was doing cocaine hisself how the hell would he give her two hundred dollars n he had kids himself which he probli was not taking care of anyway even if he did live with his baby mother.When u escape into that drug life that bad nothing matters nymore but waking up doing drugs and thata what kinda lifestyle ad had slipped into
Well, I'm not the only one who saw it. Good.I feel like Shaniyah's POS "father" is responsible for placing her in a dangerous situation. Funny how he only seemed to care and turn on the waterworks after that little angel got sold, raped and murdered. Eff you Bradley Lockhart, you sorry sack of sheet.
FAYETTEVILLE, N.C. --
Antoinette Davis entered guilty pleas Friday to several charges against her in the 2009 kidnapping and murder of her daughter Shaniya.
In a deal worked out with prosecutors, Davis did not plead guilty to first-degree murder - as originally charged - but entered so-called Alford pleas to second-degree murder and a host of other charges including first-degree kidnapping and felony child abuse.
Under North Carolina law, an Alford plea means the defendant does not admit guilt, but concedes prosecutors have enough evidence to likely get a conviction.
Prosecutors say Davis gave her daughter to Mario McNeill on Nov. 10, 2009, to settle a drug debt. McNeill was convicted of Shaniya's murder and sentenced to death in May. He also was convicted of kidnapping and sexually abusing Shaniya.
Cumberland County Superior Court Judge Jim Ammons sentenced Davis to between 17 and a half and 21 years in prison.
"You had the opportunity, the means, to save Shaniya's life and you did not. You are not a good mother," he told her.
Davis made a tearful apology to Shaniya's father Brad Lockhart for raising their child in the environment she did - saying she "let her pride get in the way."
"I never said I was a perfect mother, but I was a good mother. I did what I had to do to provide. I did what I had to do to make sure they were alright. I didn't have any help from anybody," she said.
"I forgave you a long time ago and Shaniya did [too]," said Lockhart.
Davis' attorney said she pleaded guilty because she always felt "morally responsible" for what happened to Shaniya, but she also took Alford pleas to avoid the three consecutive life sentences that a first-degree murder conviction would have meant. The pleas entered Friday clear the way for a possible appeal.
The plea deal Friday came right after Judge Ammons refused to suppress evidence against Davis in a pre-trial hearing. Her lawyers had argued she was coerced into making statements to police before her arrest.
Davis' trial had been scheduled to begin Oct. 28.
Judge Ammons said Friday there is no evidence that Davis was threatened by police before or during an interview with detectives.
The defense asked for fourth police interrogation DVD to be thrown out of case. It is a recording of the interview that took place on November 14, 2009 - four days after Shaniya's disappearance. At the end of the interview, Davis admits to giving up her child - telling detectives "I just gave her over (for) $200. They were just supposed to have sex."
The defense claimed coercive and hasty techniques were used by detectives to summon the "false statement," as Davis was treated as a suspect, rather than a mother trying to help to find her daughter.
Lawyers said detectives repeatedly told her "You need to go down the right path. You need to go down the right path," and "No matter what you say, you will walk out today," creating the idea that her leaving the police department was dependent on her admitting something.
The defense claimed she was in a sensitive condition: pregnant, sick, and emotionally distraught over Shaniya's disappearance.
But prosecutors pointed out the transcript of the interview shows Davis was told that detectives could not force her to stay and talk, and they were only focused on getting her help finding her daughter.
While McNeill was sentenced to death, Davis did not face the death penalty. In all, she pleaded guilty to second-degree murder, second-degree kidnapping, first-degree sex offense, sexual servitude with a child, human trafficking, and conspiracy.
Legal experts said Davis will likely spend a total of 20 years behind bars.
Davis' attorney said she pleaded guilty because she always felt "morally responsible" for what happened to Shaniya
17 and a half and 21 years in prison.
Legal experts said Davis will likely spend a total of 20 years behind bars.
@SpQa this one is 34 pages. Did you know about this?
Yeah it is.this is the stuff nightmares are made of
Here's a little clearer picture of her:
I'm an internet radio dj and our station takes missing kids very very seriously. I've been putting this out every hour. There's another missing child. I'm going to post information on her as well.
Yeah it is.
I had to take my funny down because nothing about nightmares is funny.
--Al
... that poor little girl...OMG I just read a few posts and this is the stuff nightmares are made of.
Investigators took McNeill into custody after finding security video from a Sanford hotel that showed him with Shaniya, but he repeatedly told them that he didn't kill the girl, saying that her family had asked him to hand her off to somebody else at the hotel.body of Shaniya Davis was found in a kudzu patch off N.C. Highway 87 near the Lee-Harnett county line on Nov. 16, 2009, six days after her mother, Antoinette Nicole Davis, reported her missing from their mobile home on Sleepy Hollow Drive in Fayetteville. An autopsy determined that she had been sexually assaulted and asphyxiated.
That was from 2009
Yes but they just fry that fucker now.That was from 2009
Then what happened?
In early 2007, Lockhart, who was in the military, purchased a home in Fayetteville and moved in four of his children, including Shaniya. Lockhart said he and Antoinette Davis had an informal arrangement, and Shaniya continued to spend time with her mother.
He began crying as he described how his daughter liked to play and dress up.
“She always fell asleep on my chest,” Lockhart said. “She would always try to kiss my cheek.”
Lockhart said he’s felt a range of emotions since Shaniya’s death.
“Losing a child is probably the hardest thing anyone out there could experience,” he said. “It’s hard to sleep, even after three and a half years. I’ve had two collapsed lungs due to the stress.
"It’s hard to stay focused and function. You think about everything you could have done different. You get to the point where you blame yourself,” he said.
Shaniya’s 21-year-old half-sister, Cheyenne Lockhart, testified after her father. She described her baby sister as her “mini-me” who would play with her makeup and follow her everywhere.
“She was real bubbly,” she said, wiping away tears. “She loved to talk. She loved to play jokes. She would always tell us that she loved us.
“It’s hard, it’s painful – just to know that she was once here and someone took her out of this world. There is no day that goes by that I don’t think about her,” she said.