5 year old Shaniya Davis - left / Antoinette Nicole Davis mother from hell on the right |
Quote from Antoinette Nicole Davis "I
never said I was a perfect mother, but I was a good mother."
FAYETTEVILLE, N.C. — The mother of a 5-year-old Fayetteville
girl who was murdered almost four years ago will spend at least 17 years in
prison after pleading guilty Friday to several charges in her death.
Antoinette Nicole Davis, 29, entered Alford pleas to
second-degree murder, human trafficking, first-degree kidnapping, first-degree
sex offense, felony child abuse with prostitution, child abuse involving a sex
act, sexual servitude, indecent liberties with a child and conspiracy to commit
sex offense of a child. She was sentenced to between 210 and 261 months in
prison.
An Alford plea allows a defendant to plead guilty, while
maintaining his or her innocence, because there is sufficient evidence to find
him or her guilty. The plea deal, which included the dismissal of a
first-degree rape charge, heads off a trial that was scheduled to begin Oct.
28.
Shaniya Davis was reported missing from her Fayetteville
home on Nov. 10, 2009. Her body was found six days later in an overgrown field
on the Lee-Harnett county line, and an autopsy determined that she had been
sexually assaulted and suffocated.
Mario Andrette McNeill, 32, was convicted in May of
kidnapping and assaulting Shaniya before killing her, and he was sentenced to
death.
Davis apologized to Shaniya's father, Bradley Lockhart, in
court Friday, saying she had been too proud to let his family care for their
daughter.
"I want to say I did the best I could with my
children," she said. "I never said I was a perfect mother, but I was
a good mother. I did what I had to provide for them. I did what I had to to
make sure they were alright. I didn't have any help from anybody."
Superior Court Judge Jim Ammons tersely disagreed.
"You could have saved your daughter's life, and you did
not. You had the time, the opportuity and the means to save Shaniya's life, and
you did not," he said. "You are not a good mother. This did not have
to happen."
Ammons ordered her to register as a sex offender for 30
years and suggested that she receive psychological counseling in prison.
Defense attorney D.W.Bray said Davis always felt morally
responsible for what happened to Shaniya.
Lockhart said he still grieves for his daughter but said he
forgave Davis a long time ago and that he knows Shaniya did as well.
"Maybe you can take this time and dig deep within you
and help others by sharing your story," he told Davis.
The hastily arranged plea followed a pre-trial motions
hearing Friday morning in which Ammons denied an attempt by the defense to keep
Davis' statements to police out of her trial.
Bray argued that investigators browbeat Davis over four days
of questioning about Shaniya's disappearance, and they never advised her of her
rights to remain silent or to confer with an attorney. On the fourth day, he
said, she finally "broke."
"I gave her to him to cover $200. He was only supposed
to have sex," a sobbing Davis told investigators at the time.
Cumberland County District Attorney Billy West said McNeill
previously lent Davis $200 to buy food and pay for a hotel room when she and
her children were homeless. Information in an autopsy report claimed the debt
to be drug-related, but West said that was incorrect.
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