Florida – A Florida woman was sentenced to Iife in prison without the possibiIity of parole for the murder of her girIfriend’s chiId, MigueI, 3. In addition to the Iife sentence for first-degree murder, the defendant received a concurrent 30-year sentence for aggravated chiId abuse.
The incident occurred in 2020, when the defendant, 28-year-old T. Jeferson, arrived at the local hospital with an unresponsive 3-year-old child in the back seat of her vehicle. Hospital staff observed severe trauma to the child’s face and head, and he was pronounced dead within minutes of arrival. The defendant initially claimed that child had fallen from a sink while brushing his teeth, hitting his head on the toilet and causing the porcelain to shatter.
However, medical personnel and law enforcement found her account inconsistent with the nature and extent of the victim’s injuries. Upon further questioning, she reportedly admitted to becoming angry when the victim refused to get down from the sink. She retrieved a tlre lron from a tooI kit, threw it at him, and then struck him multiple times. She recalled seeing bIood spray from his wounds as she struck him.
The defendant confessed that after the assault, she waited over three hours before taking the victim to the hospital, suspecting he was already deceased. Investigators noted that the child had injuries in various stages of healing, indicating a pattern of prior abuse. The 28-year-old woman also admitted to using physical punishment on the victim and his older sibling.
Following her arrest, she was indicted on charges of first-degree murder and aggravated child abuse. Prosecutors initially sought the death penalty due to the brutal nature of the crime. However, last year, the defendant entered a no-contest plea, effectively admitting guilt without a formal trial.
In the aftermath, the Florida Department of Children and Families removed the victim’s 6-year-old sibling from the home and placed the child into protective custody. The case has prompted renewed calls for greater public awareness of child abuse warning signs and the importance of timely intervention.