November 17, 2009 1:30 PM

Will Shaniya's Mom Face Murder Charge?

By
CBSNews
(CBS)  The father of a 5-year-old girl whose body was found off a rural North Carolina road regrets giving the girl's mother a chance to raise their daughter, even though she seemed to be getting her life together.

Shaniya Davis' father, Bradley Lockhart, said he had a one-night stand with Antoinette Davis and mostly brought up their daughter before letting Davis take care of her.

A month later, Shaniya was dead, her body dumped off a rural road and her mother accused of selling her for sex.

So, even if Antoinette Davis is not directly linked to her killing, could she be charged in some way in her daughter's death?

Former Massachusetts prosecutor Wendy Murphy said on "The Early Show" she can't predict.

However, Murphy said, if Davis knew the child was being taken or delivered for prostitution purposes, then she could be charged with murder under the felony murder rule.

Murphy explained, "She's responsible for the consequences of a murder that follows in connection with a felony, and it certainly is a felony that she's charged with thus far. So the possibility is there, for sure."

As for prosecuting Shaniya's 25-year-old mother, Murphy said, it could be hard persuading a judge and jury that a mother is capable of selling her child into prostitution.

"Believe it or not, that's going to be the best defense here, just saying to the jury, 'It doesn't make sense, therefore, you have reasonable doubt,' " Murphy said. "And believe me, it works. But the truth is, sometimes mothers are capable of terrible things, and we romanticize motherhood sometimes to our own disadvantage, especially when it comes to protecting children. We have to be willing to accept that, sometimes, mothers can do things like this, literally selling their children for money."

Murphy said Antoinette Davis could have been desperate, perhaps with a history of addiction.

"She might have a drug debt of some sort," Murphy said. "I'm speculating here of course, but desperate mothers sometimes do terrible things."

Murphy said the investigation will hinge on what Antoinette Davis says next.

"She has counsel," Murphy said, referring to Anoinette's lawyers. "She may assert her Fifth Amendment right to remain silent. But I'll tell you this much: If she really is more of a victim than a perpetrator, then she's going to tell the authorities exactly what she knows about the men involved in this story. She could well be working on making some sort of deal just like that right now. It remains to be seen. Thus far, she's not saying anything."

Shaniya's father said at a vigil Monday night in his daughter's memory, "Lord, I come to you with open arms and it is hard. It is hard. Don't give up on me and don't give up on Shaniya," he said. "She's right there with you.""

Lockhart stood among a crowd of about 500 gathered in a store parking lot for the vigil.

When Shaniya was reported missing, suspicion initially turned to a man described as her mother's boyfriend. As he was let go, police targeted another man spotted on hotel surveillance footage holding the child. Then, authorities arrested the girl's mother and accused her of offering her daughter for prostitution.

The arrests offered a glimmer of hope Shaniya would be found alive. But on Monday, searchers discovered the girl's body off a rural road, nearly a week after her mother reported her missing from a mobile home park in Fayetteville.

At a second memorial about 40 miles away in Sanford, where Shaniya's body was found, dozens of people attended a Baptist church.

"We have kids and it just hit so close to home. It's unbelievable how somebody can just do something that horrible to something so precious," said organizer Crystal Godfrey.

Hundreds of volunteers who helped look for Shaniya left the search area dejected, unable to bring her home to her father, 7-year-old brother and the dolls she so loved.

"I still feel kind of sick to my stomach," said Angela Jackson, 27, of Sanford, who has a 2-month-old daughter and searched for consecutive days.

Particularly disturbing were the accusations against Antoinette Davis. Police charged Davis with human trafficking and felony child abuse, saying Shaniya was offered for sex.

Davis was calm and quiet during a court appearance. She provided one-word answers to the judge's questions. She requested a court-appointed attorney and did not enter a plea.

Her sister, Brenda Davis, 20, said she does not believe the charges.

"I don't believe she could hurt her children," said Brenda Davis, who spoke with her sister at the jail Sunday. Davis' aunt, Yvonne Mitchell, said the mother had two jobs and would never harm the child.

Authorities also charged Mario Andrette McNeill, 29, with kidnapping after they said surveillance footage from a Sanford hotel showed him carrying Shaniya. Authorities said McNeill admitted taking the girl, though his attorney said he will plead not guilty.

Fayetteville police spokeswoman Theresa Chance declined to talk about additional charges. She also wouldn't comment on a cause of death or the condition of Shaniya's body, except to say that investigators planned to retrieve it about 100 feet off the road.

"Detectives have been running off adrenaline to find this little girl and to bring her home alive," Chance said. "You have a lot of people in shock right now."

Davis reported Shaniya missing from a mobile home park Nov. 10. Authorities first arrested Clarence Coe, but charges against him were dropped a day later when investigators tracked down McNeill after receiving a tip from a hotel employee.

Additional information led investigators to a search site near Sanford on Sunday. They continued searching Monday, scouring miles of landscape, roads, ravines and fields on four-wheelers and with helicopters.

"We were hoping that someone could carry her home," said Syd Severe, 42, who came from Raleigh to help with the search. "It's just sick."

A cluster of emergency vehicles and law enforcement gathered where Shaniya's body was found. Authorities blocked access to the road, a rural area popular with hunters that is less than a mile from a lakeside community.

Shaniya's father said he raised his daughter for several years but last month decided to let her stay with her mother. He had pleaded for her safe return.

Lockhart told The Associated Press on Saturday that he and Davis never argued about him raising Shaniya, and Cumberland County courts had no record of a custody dispute. He said he did not know McNeill.

Davis struggled financially over the years, but she recently got a job and her own place, so Lockhart said he decided to give her a chance with their daughter.

"I should've never let her go over there," he said Saturday night.

Copyright 2009 CBS. All rights reserved.
Add a Comment See all 16 Comments
by pictw January 26, 2010 2:56 AM EST
You know what is really sickening is that there is a large enough demand out there for sex that trafficking even exists. It's a huge business on a huge continuum that begins with a normal desire for sex and little by little turns twisted, violent, forceful and disgusting. Think about how just the purchase of one porn video contributes to this business. I know many of my male friends have some kind of video or magazine collection and it's really sad to think of how the action of them buying those things contributes to how and why trafficking got started in the first place. I am not a square by any means but this really makes me sad.
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by pictw January 26, 2010 2:39 AM EST
I may be against the death penalty but anyone involved in any kind of adult or children human trafficking or any pedophiles should have to die. If I had a fatal disease I would spend my remaining time tracking these people down and killing them myself. I don't believe in heaven, but if it did exist I know I'd get in for protecting the children. The father is not to blame, he couldn't have known this would happen and I know he will forever blame himself which is really too bad. It is all her fault. She is a terrible person and it is a shame it turned out that way.
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by t-mac39 November 18, 2009 10:01 AM EST
THEY ALL NEED TO GET THE DEATH PENALTY.WHEN DID SHE REALIZE HER CHILD WAS GONE, WHEN SHE CAME OFF HER HIGH. I HOPE THIS HAUNTS THE FATHER FOR THE REST OF HIS LIFE.HE HAS BEEN RAISING THIS CHILD HER ENTIRE LIFE NOW ALL OF A SUDDEN HE WANTS THE CHILD TO GET TO KNOW HER MOTHER.COME ON.FIRST YOU LOOK INTO WHERE THE MOTHER WAS LIVING THAT SHOULD HAVE THREW UP A RED FLAG COMPARED TO HER LIVING CONDITIONS WITH HIM.HE SHOULD HAVE DONE MORE INVESTIGATING BEFORE TURNING HER OVER TO THE MOTHER.MY OPINION IS THAT HE WAS TIRED OF RAISING HER AND WANTED HIS FREEDOM SO HE GAVE HER TO THE MOTHER.
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by dwhite1232 December 5, 2009 12:32 PM EST
t-mac your a f'ing loser, you scumbag, how could you say such things, you ******* *******.
by jollybean84 November 17, 2009 10:03 PM EST
It is a bit odd after 4 years of taking care of his daughter, he gave her to the mother because she possibly had a job?? But I'm sure I don't know the full reasoning behind his decision. Well, need not to say more because I'm sure he is in such regret and sorrow. It's plain sad and awful that an innocent 5 year old endured unmanageable pain.
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by jollybean84 November 17, 2009 10:02 PM EST
It is a bit odd after 4 years of taking care of his daughter, he gave her to the mother because she possibly had a job?? But I'm sure I don't know the full reasoning behind his decision. Well, need not to say more because I'm sure he is in such regret and sorrow. It's plain sad and awful that an innocent 5 year old endured unmanageable pain.
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by venicementor November 17, 2009 3:14 PM EST
DaVicar8 - Please spare us from your idiocy! Typical BS on the part of some people, place the responsibility of monsters on someone else. It's always someone else's fault except for the perps. You must be from Florida!
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by jd2408 November 17, 2009 8:48 PM EST
You are the idiot here. This father had no idea what the woman that he had a one night stand with was doing or how she was living. From what I understand he lived in another state. This little girl didn't even know her mother. He turned her over to a total stranger, to a death squad. Why ? There must be a reason. He may not have killed her but in my opinion he played a major roll in this whole thing.
by krustykanuck November 17, 2009 10:17 PM EST
jd2408 spare me you moronic blathering. I agree with venicementor that you are in need of a real shrink to come to these conclusions. Nobody really knows yet how well the father knew Antoinette Davis. Perhaps he knew her even before their one night stand. Stop coming to conclusions... really idiotic conclusions.... make that completely moronic conclusions until the facts come out. The only charges laid so far are against the man seen with her at a hotel and the mother. I am sure the police and prosecutors have a better idea of whats going on than you do. As the article quotes Former Massachusetts prosecutor Wendy Murphy "it could be hard persuading a judge and jury that a mother is capable of selling her child into prostitution."
by KatStev-Smith November 17, 2009 1:58 PM EST
This little girl was too beautiful and innocent, this is heart breaking.I can't imagine the suffering she went through, forced into prostitution, a small child not having any idea what is going to happen to her.This is why all child murderers/rapists/molesters need to die, just kill them and the mother...I would have fought kicking and screaming if someone were to take my little girl, but to willfully hand her over to strangers to perform indecent acts on her is psychotic...Lets hope there is a special place set aside in Hell for people who hurt, murder in molest children and lets send them there first class!When I see that video of that baby being taken into a hotel room, I want to jump through the TV,because we know whats going on behind those doors!!! I cannot stress how much people like this need to be KILLED !!How many more children is it going to take.
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by pictw January 26, 2010 2:43 AM EST
I totally agree with that.
by DaVicar8 November 17, 2009 1:43 PM EST
The father turned this little girl over to this freak-of-a-mother???

Why isn't he being charged with child endangering?
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by jd2408 November 17, 2009 8:37 PM EST
I agree. The father who lives in another state and could not have any idea what this mothers friends, living conditions, habits or anything about her life, yet he turned over this little girl to her death squad. I have NO compassion for him in the least. He failed her. There is more to this story that we will never hear. Did his present wife want the little girl out of their lives ? Something went on there. My heart and prayers go out to this little girl. What utter hell she must have lived thru. I hope the people, including the father, are reminded every day of their lives what they did to her.
by pictw January 26, 2010 2:43 AM EST
Um maybe because he was not knowingly doing so? People can lead secretlives and seem like alright people to others. It's not at all his fault.
by PaGuy1960 November 17, 2009 1:21 PM EST
We can only hope.
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