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Therapists get 16 years
Women plan to appeal convictions in death of 10-year-old Candace in rebirthing therapy
Denver Rocky Mountain News, June 19, 2001http://www.insidedenver.com/ By Peggy Lowe, News Staff Writer [Story no longer online? Read this]
(...) Connell Watkins, 54, and Julie Ponder, 40, who both said Candace Newmaker's death was a tragic accident, will serve at least six years before becoming eligible for parole. Both plan to appeal their April 20 convictions for child abuse resulting in death.
Jefferson County District Court Judge Jane Tidball said she believed neither woman intended to hurt Candace. While saying she didn't have much discretion on the 16-to-48 year mandatory sentence, Tidball said it will send "a powerful message" to other mental health practitioners who might consider the controversial therapy. Still, Tidball called the crime "horrific," and mentioned the "unrelenting intensity" of the three-week trial where the videotaped procedure was played several times. (...) Candace died April 19, 1999, a day after the rebirthing session in Watkins' Evergreen home. Candace was wrapped in a sheet and placed under several large pillows. Watkins, Ponder and two other adults then pushed against the child to simulate contractions, urging Candace to be "reborn" to her adoptive mother, Jeane Newmaker of Durham, N.C. (...) Both Watkins and Ponder made tearful appeals Monday to Tidball, pleading for the more lenient sentence. Watkins, in a 10-minute dramatic statement, told Tidball that she had experienced "the dark night of my soul" since Candace's death. Watkins said she has "profound sorrow and regret and remorse" over the child's death. (...) Ponder said she retraces the rebirthing in her head every day, wondering where she went wrong. "If I had only stopped five minutes sooner or checked on her one more time," Ponder said. "I was trying to help her and something unexpected happened." Four of the jurors who convicted Ponder and Watkins, who said they fell in love with the little brown-haired girl while watching the videotapes of her therapy, cried again Monday during the sentencing. "I think 16 years was perfect," said juror Marcia Hagan. "(Watkin is) not a hard criminal, but she needs to pay for what she's done." Prosecutors urged Tidball to give Watkins and Ponder the maximum sentence, calling the rebirthing "torturous cruelty of a sickening and depraved nature." Watkins ridiculed, belittled, physically abused and finally smothered the child, said Steve Jensen of the Jefferson County District Attorney's office. "The defendant literally tortured Candace Newmaker before killing her," Jensen said. (...) Tidball also sentenced Watkins to another year and four months in jail for three lesser charges, including criminal impersonation, unlawful practice of psychotherapy and using another's signature for deception. Those sentences will run concurrently with the longer time. Three other people are scheduled to stand trial in Candace's death: her adopted mother, Jeane Newmaker, who witnessed the rebirthing session and is charged with criminally negligent child abuse resulting in death; and Brita St. Clair and her husband, Jack McDaniel, who participated in the therapy and who are charged with child abuse resulting in death. [...more...] [Need the full story? Read this]
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