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Who's Babysitting YOUR Keets???

Posted: June 6, 2007 3:47 pm
by PIA
Scary Scary Scary....

Article published Jun 6, 2007

Cops: Teen out all night
Police say sitter drinking hours before drownings

By Lisa Thompson
lisa.thompson@timesnews.com

WATERFORD -- Beer chilled in a cooler next to the Edinboro fire pit.

Nineteen-year-old Brittany N. Steward's baby-sitting job started at home in southwestern Waterford Township early the next morning.

Friends told police she stayed at the Edinboro bonfire party until after dawn, awake and drinking heavily.

Steward reported the party's end to her friend in a text message she sent between 7 and 8 a.m. after she returned to her home to baby-sit.

"OK im finally done drinking," Steward said in the text message. "im rocked."
By noon, both of Steward's charges -- her 20-month-old half sister, Jenna Walker, and Jenna's 2-year-old best friend, Maggie Kovski -- were dead. Police said they drowned in the Walker family's backyard pond after Steward fell asleep on the couch and left the girls unattended for at least an hour.

Steward told police she woke about 11 a.m. and followed a trail of children's toys from the house through the open garage door to the lawn outside.

She said she looked across the yard and saw the children in the water.

Jenna still had on her pink sleeper.

Maggie, an only child who had been conceived with the help of a fertility clinic in Cleveland, had celebrated her second birthday earlier in the month.
One day after the Kovski and Walker families held funerals for the girls at St. Francis Xavier Catholic Church in McKean, state police arrested Steward on felony charges of involuntary manslaughter, alleging her gross negligence resulted in the girls' drowning deaths May 30 at the Walker home, 12333 Sharp Road.

The criminal complaint, filed by Trooper Dale Wimer, for the first time reveals not only that police believe that Steward drank heavily in the hours leading up to her baby-sitting duties, but also that Kovski's mother, Renea Kovski, gave Steward repeated opportunities to back out of the baby-sitting job the morning the girls drowned.

Steward was placed in Erie County Prison after failing to post $50,000 cash bond.

Before announcing the charges Tuesday, state police Cpl. Mark Zaleski paused to express condolences to both the Walker and Kovski families.

The case had been "extremely difficult" for all involved, he said.
District Attorney Brad Foulk said his office and state police are "painfully aware of the sensitivities in this matter."

Erie County Coroner Lyell Cook, who ruled the girls' deaths accidental, said that if anything positive can come from the "unspeakable tragedy," it might be to remind people that baby-sitting is more than a chore.

"It is a serious business," he said.

Police and prosecutors did not seek the families' input on the charging decision, Foulk said. But they did explain to them the charges before they were filed.

Foulk said he expects some to question the decision to charge Steward and the severity of the charges against her.
Police and prosecutors closely examined the law and the evidence before deciding to seek to hold Steward criminally liable, he said.

"We feel comfortable the charges are appropriate and fair," he said.
Inconsistencies
Police based the charges against Steward on inconsistencies in the information they said she provided about her actions leading up to the drownings. They also cited her knowledge of the danger posed by the pond and her decision to accept responsibility for the girls when she was not capable of taking care of them and when she was offered an opportunity to bow out.

"Her ability to care for the children was directly affected by her actions leading up to the drowning," Zaleski said.
The criminal complaint reveals a case built through several interviews of Steward's friends and family members in the hours and days after the drownings.

Wimer alleges Steward made inconsistent statements as the events unfolded:

When she first discovered the children in the pond and called 911 at 11:15 a.m., Steward told a dispatcher that the girls were playing outside and that she left them to answer the phone. She said she then found them in the pond.

Later, she told a state trooper who had arrived at the scene that she had put the children down for a nap about 10 a.m., Jenna in her crib and Maggie on the floor next to the crib. Steward told the trooper, William McLellan, that she fell asleep and woke about 11 a.m. when the phone rang, police said.

She described how she followed a trail of toys from the garage to an outside area near a larger detached garage. She said she looked across the backyard toward the pond and saw her family dog and the neighbor's dog jumping in. She said that as she got closer to the pond, she saw the girls' bodies in the water. She pulled them out and tried to perform CPR, police said.
Police said Steward told them she had been at a bonfire party in Edinboro the night before and had drunk three beers and gone to bed at midnight.

Witnesses, however, told police Steward had been drinking steadily throughout the night and left the party after dawn.

Their accounts were backed up by the "im rocked" text message that Steward sent to a friend, which police found on the friend's phone.

Steward told police she had placed Jenna in a crib before she, Steward, fell asleep. But police said Lynn Walker and her husband, Steward's stepfather, John, told them Jenna had never climbed out of her crib and had only just learned how to pull herself up on the rails.

Jenna could barely see over the rails, police said.
'Yes, I am fine'
In the criminal complaint, police also focused on Steward's failure to back out of the baby-sitting job, even when Maggie Kovski's mother offered to care for the children herself.

According to the complaint, Steward had previously promised her mother she would baby-sit Jenna on May 30 because Lynn Walker had to work.

That morning, police said, Renea Kovski called the Walker home and asked if Steward also could watch Maggie for a few hours.
Steward agreed to watch Maggie, Kovski told police. But when Kovski arrived at the Walker home about 8:10 a.m. to drop off Maggie, she found Steward sleeping on the couch and Jenna crying in her crib.

Kovski told police she woke Steward and asked her what she was doing.

Steward told Kovski she would be fine, that she was just really tired, Kovski told police.

Kovski told police she let Steward sleep another 30 minutes while she played with the girls.

Kovski said she placed Maggie in Steward's care only after she obtained Steward's repeated promise that she was able to stay awake and care for the girls, police said.
Kovski said she told Steward to call her if she had trouble staying awake.

She said she warned Steward that Maggie knew how to open doors.

As she left the house, Kovski told police she closed both the doors to the garage.

She said she asked Steward twice to lock them behind her.

LISA THOMPSON can be reached at 870-1802 or by e-mail.
What's next?
A preliminary hearing is scheduled for June 11 before Summit Township District Judge James Dwyer.

Posted: June 6, 2007 3:51 pm
by green1
I'd kill her.

Posted: June 6, 2007 3:58 pm
by rednekkPH
The girl drank all night long until around 7am. The mother dropped the kid off at 8:10am, and didn't smell booze on the girl? Something does not sound quite right there.

Posted: June 6, 2007 4:03 pm
by pojo
How can you NOT smell Beer on her??? This is horrendous.

Posted: June 6, 2007 4:04 pm
by Wino you know
green1 wrote:I'd kill her.
Damn right.

Posted: June 6, 2007 4:12 pm
by SharkOnLand
When people are stupid like this, it should cost them their lives, not the lives of innocent kids....

Posted: June 6, 2007 4:22 pm
by RinglingRingling
rednekkPH wrote:The girl drank all night long until around 7am. The mother dropped the kid off at 8:10am, and didn't smell booze on the girl? Something does not sound quite right there.
yeah... "repeated opportunities to back out"? wonder what prompted that?

Posted: June 6, 2007 4:57 pm
by PIA
here is the sentence so far....

Steward was arraigned on two counts each of involuntary manslaughter, a second-degree felony; endangering the welfare of a child, a first-degree misdemeanor; and recklessly endangering another person, a second-degree misdemeanor. Harborcreek Township District Judge Mark Krahe arraigned Steward and jailed her on $50,000 bond.


shes in the erie county prison right now...

Posted: June 6, 2007 5:00 pm
by STL PARROTHEAD
RinglingRingling wrote:
rednekkPH wrote:The girl drank all night long until around 7am. The mother dropped the kid off at 8:10am, and didn't smell booze on the girl? Something does not sound quite right there.
yeah... "repeated opportunities to back out"? wonder what prompted that?
YEP..............hmmmmmm.........................

Posted: June 6, 2007 5:38 pm
by Indiana Jolly Mon
While I agree at the implications that if the mother suspected something, she should have gone with her gut and not let her watch them, I am a bit surprised that she is being more attacked than the girl. The mother made a mistake in judgement and will pay for that every day of her life, the babysitter was responsible for their deaths and hopefully will pay for it through severe legal punishment.

Posted: June 6, 2007 7:30 pm
by Y-NO-9-O
I see, so not one of you here pontificating has fooled a grown-up or parent with gum and "I'm just a little tired"? Or, "the damn pollen is making my eyes red"? There are 2 moms out there kicking themselves bad enough, but you all to sit here and say "how could they not know". People, we are talking about a 19 year old here and she is the guilty one. Give her the most severe sentence the court can deliver but the mothers are the ones with the life sentence. GET OFF THEIR F***ING BACKS!
I respectfully bow out to all your I-am-smarter-and-wiser-than-everyone-else posts.

Posted: June 6, 2007 8:35 pm
by yes i am a
Y-NO-9-O wrote:I see, so not one of you here pontificating has fooled a grown-up or parent with gum and "I'm just a little tired"? Or, "the damn pollen is making my eyes red"? There are 2 moms out there kicking themselves bad enough, but you all to sit here and say "how could they not know". People, we are talking about a 19 year old here and she is the guilty one. Give her the most severe sentence the court can deliver but the mothers are the ones with the life sentence. GET OFF THEIR F***ING BACKS!
I respectfully bow out to all your I-am-smarter-and-wiser-than-everyone-else posts.
well said

Posted: June 6, 2007 10:28 pm
by jonesbeach10
Y-NO-9-O wrote:I see, so not one of you here pontificating has fooled a grown-up or parent with gum and "I'm just a little tired"? Or, "the damn pollen is making my eyes red"? There are 2 moms out there kicking themselves bad enough, but you all to sit here and say "how could they not know". People, we are talking about a 19 year old here and she is the guilty one. Give her the most severe sentence the court can deliver but the mothers are the ones with the life sentence. GET OFF THEIR F***ING BACKS!
I respectfully bow out to all your I-am-smarter-and-wiser-than-everyone-else posts.
Exactly. What if instead of texting her friend telling her that "I'm rocked," tell the mothers that she was drunk after partying all night and that she isn't capable of watching two toddlers?

Posted: June 6, 2007 11:23 pm
by RinglingRingling
Y-NO-9-O wrote:I see, so not one of you here pontificating has fooled a grown-up or parent with gum and "I'm just a little tired"? Or, "the damn pollen is making my eyes red"? There are 2 moms out there kicking themselves bad enough, but you all to sit here and say "how could they not know". People, we are talking about a 19 year old here and she is the guilty one. Give her the most severe sentence the court can deliver but the mothers are the ones with the life sentence. GET OFF THEIR F***ING BACKS!
I respectfully bow out to all your I-am-smarter-and-wiser-than-everyone-else posts.
how about "there's enough blame to go around for everyone, and nailing a 19 year old for the whole thing seems a bit much?" Did she screw up? yeah. is she going to pay? just as much as the moms is my guess, even if she doesn't do jail time. Should there be punishment? yeah. But everyone hosed up in this one, and the prosecutor got out in front of the curve to look tough on crime for any future electoral ambitions.

am I sorry the little girls died? yeah. I am. Am I sad for the parents? yeah, I am. Am I sad that there is a 19 year old who, in an hour of sleep, went from potential to doomed? yeah, I am.

Like I said.. there is enough blame to go around here for everyone.

Posted: June 7, 2007 9:01 am
by Indiana Jolly Mon
Not to argue with you R2, but saying the 19 year old will suffer just as much even if not jail time is not true. If you know people who have lost young children you would know that those are scars that never heal, ever. And as much guilt as she may have, it will never be anywhere near what they feel. It is a tragedy and the 19 year old made a tragic mistake. To say she should have no jail time and only have her guilt as punishment is not enough. People need to learn that there are consequences for their actions.
Ok, off my soapbox now.

Posted: June 7, 2007 9:10 am
by RinglingRingling
Indiana Jolly Mon wrote:Not to argue with you R2, but saying the 19 year old will suffer just as much even if not jail time is not true. If you know people who have lost young children you would know that those are scars that never heal, ever. And as much guilt as she may have, it will never be anywhere near what they feel. It is a tragedy and the 19 year old made a tragic mistake. To say she should have no jail time and only have her guilt as punishment is not enough. People need to learn that there are consequences for their actions.
Ok, off my soapbox now.
she's carrying two deaths around on her conscience, I have a feeling that kinda weight isn't for the average person to bear.

Posted: June 7, 2007 9:26 am
by green1
RinglingRingling wrote:
Indiana Jolly Mon wrote:Not to argue with you R2, but saying the 19 year old will suffer just as much even if not jail time is not true. If you know people who have lost young children you would know that those are scars that never heal, ever. And as much guilt as she may have, it will never be anywhere near what they feel. It is a tragedy and the 19 year old made a tragic mistake. To say she should have no jail time and only have her guilt as punishment is not enough. People need to learn that there are consequences for their actions.
Ok, off my soapbox now.
she's carrying two deaths around on her conscience, I have a feeling that kinda weight isn't for the average person to bear.
Cry me a river. She murdered two children. The fact she was unconcious on the couch is the same excuse a drunk driver would use when he/she rams another car.

Posted: June 7, 2007 9:31 am
by RinglingRingling
green1 wrote:
RinglingRingling wrote:
Indiana Jolly Mon wrote:Not to argue with you R2, but saying the 19 year old will suffer just as much even if not jail time is not true. If you know people who have lost young children you would know that those are scars that never heal, ever. And as much guilt as she may have, it will never be anywhere near what they feel. It is a tragedy and the 19 year old made a tragic mistake. To say she should have no jail time and only have her guilt as punishment is not enough. People need to learn that there are consequences for their actions.
Ok, off my soapbox now.
she's carrying two deaths around on her conscience, I have a feeling that kinda weight isn't for the average person to bear.
Cry me a river. She murdered two children. The fact she was unconcious on the couch is the same excuse a drunk driver would use when he/she rams another car.
actually, there is a difference... subtle, but there is a difference.

Posted: June 7, 2007 9:49 am
by green1
RinglingRingling wrote:
green1 wrote:
RinglingRingling wrote:
Indiana Jolly Mon wrote:Not to argue with you R2, but saying the 19 year old will suffer just as much even if not jail time is not true. If you know people who have lost young children you would know that those are scars that never heal, ever. And as much guilt as she may have, it will never be anywhere near what they feel. It is a tragedy and the 19 year old made a tragic mistake. To say she should have no jail time and only have her guilt as punishment is not enough. People need to learn that there are consequences for their actions.
Ok, off my soapbox now.
she's carrying two deaths around on her conscience, I have a feeling that kinda weight isn't for the average person to bear.
Cry me a river. She murdered two children. The fact she was unconcious on the couch is the same excuse a drunk driver would use when he/she rams another car.
actually, there is a difference... subtle, but there is a difference.
Not from my perspective. Both are murderers and should be treated as such.

Posted: June 7, 2007 10:01 am
by rednekkPH
Y-NO-9-O wrote:I see, so not one of you here pontificating has fooled a grown-up or parent with gum and "I'm just a little tired"? Or, "the damn pollen is making my eyes red"? There are 2 moms out there kicking themselves bad enough, but you all to sit here and say "how could they not know". People, we are talking about a 19 year old here and she is the guilty one. Give her the most severe sentence the court can deliver but the mothers are the ones with the life sentence. GET OFF THEIR F***ING BACKS!
I respectfully bow out to all your I-am-smarter-and-wiser-than-everyone-else posts.
The babysitter should be nailed to the wall, absolutely. However, any adult that can be fooled like that an hour after an all-night drinking binge is not smart enough to have kids in the first place. I am more careful about who watches my dogs than this mother was about who was watching her kid, and for that she has to share in the blame as well.