In the Missouri Court of Appeals
Eastern District
DIVISION TWO
STATE OF MISSOURI ) No. ED108263
)
Plaintiff/Respondent, ) Appeal from the Circuit Court
) of St. Francois County
v. )
)
ROBERTA JEAN BAKER, ) Honorable Wendy Wexler Horn
)
Defendant/Appellant. ) Filed: October 20, 2020
Introduction
Roberta Jean Baker (Appellant) appeals from the judgment of the trial court entered after
a bench trial convicting her of the class B felony of abuse or neglect of a child. We reverse.
Factual and Procedural Background
In September or October of 2017, Appellant learned she was pregnant with her fourth
child. At that time, Appellant had custody of her youngest daughter and her mother was the legal
guardian of her two oldest daughters. During the pregnancy, a parole warrant was issued for
Appellant’s arrest due to her failure to report to probation and parole. Appellant also admitted to
using methamphetamine both before and during the pregnancy.
Appellant never sought prenatal care. Instead, Appellant took prenatal vitamins,
conducted research on pregnancies, and relied on her past experiences. Appellant’s water started
leaking on either February 19 or 20, 2018. At that time, Appellant contacted her friend Amy
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Harris (Amy) on Facebook. Amy said she had experience delivering babies as a medical assistant
and offered to help her with the homebirth. Appellant accepted and Amy came over with
supplies. Also present in the house during labor were Josh Felty (Josh), the supposed father;
William Bertelsmeyer (William), Appellant’s uncle; Dawn Smith (Dawn), William’s girlfriend;
and Steve Watkins, but only Appellant and Amy were in Appellant’s bedroom.
Appellant had her fourth child, Elijah Baker (E.B.) at approximately 3:30 a.m. on
February 22, 2018. E.B. was born extremely premature, weighing less than 3 pounds. However,
upon handing him to Appellant, Amy assured her that his lungs were okay. Appellant also
thought he looked great. At that point, Appellant took to Facebook, messaging friends with
pictures of her baby. Josh, William, and Dawn went to Walmart to buy baby supplies.
Over the next day, Appellant cared for and fed E.B. Appellant did not notice any issues
with him and thought he appeared small but healthy. However, at roughly 3:30 a.m. on February
23, 2018, Appellant weighed him and discovered he weighed just two pounds and eleven ounces.
At 3:41 a.m., Appellant texted Dawn and stated she was “scared af” because of the baby’s
weight.
Thereafter, Appellant fell asleep with E.B. Around 5:30 a.m., Appellant woke up to a
sound and saw the baby looked “a little discolored” and “was struggling” to breathe. Appellant
panicked and brought him to Dawn and William to see what they thought. They contacted
Appellant’s mother who called 911 and performed CPR as the baby’s condition deteriorated.
Officer Andrew Rieger was the first to respond and he immediately took over CPR. An
ambulance arrived a minute later and took E.B. to a hospital, where he was pronounced dead at
6:24 a.m. on February 23, 2018. As the baby was taken away in the ambulance, Appellant was
placed under arrest.
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Appellant was interviewed three times by Detective Matthew Wampler (Det. Wampler)
with the St. Francois County sheriff’s office. In her first interview, Appellant lied to Det.
Wampler, claiming the birth occurred on February 23, 2018, with no one else present. Appellant
then sought a second interview to correct her statements. Appellant also consented to searches of
her phone and Facebook account during the interviews.
Appellant claimed she did not seek medical attention because she thought E.B. was
healthy and she did not want to lose custody due to her drug use and outstanding warrant.
Appellant also testified that she would have gone to a doctor immediately if anything was wrong.
Appellant was charged by a second substitute information with the class A felony of
neglect of a child. Due to her criminal record, Appellant was charged as a prior and persistent
offender. The information alleged Appellant caused E.B.:
to suffer physical injury as a result of neglect by not seeking medical care for
premature child and as a result [E.B.] (D.O.B. 2/22/2018) died of injuries
sustained from this conduct.
Before trial, Appellant submitted a memorandum waiving her right to a jury trial and
thereafter a bench trial occurred. At trial, the court heard testimony from Vicky Morse,
Appellant’s mother; Paul Morse, Appellant’s stepfather; Officer Andrew Rieger; Detective
Clyde Kenneth Wakefield; Dr. Russell Deidiker (Dr. Deidiker), a forensic pathologist; Det.
Wampler; and Appellant. Dr. Deidiker was the only expert witness presented during trial.
Dr. Deidiker performed the autopsy of E.B. Dr. Deidiker testified he found material in the
baby’s stomach, which indicated live birth. Dr. Deidiker also testified he measured E.B. and
determined gestation was approximately 28 to 30 weeks and E.B. was at least 10 weeks
premature. Dr. Deidiker considered this state of prematurity to be extreme. Dr. Deidiker stated
the complications associated with extreme prematurity “[p]rimarily are respiratory difficulties.
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The lungs are just beginning to mature at around 28 weeks or so. So, children born at 28 to 30
weeks may have difficulty breathing, may have difficulty utilizing oxygen which can also then
cascade into other problems because of the lack of oxygen to various organs, such as the brain.”
Dr. Deidiker also testified 24 to 28 weeks “has kind of been a major breaking point, where prior
to that survival was much less likely, whereas after that, survival becomes more – where there’s
a greater chance of survival.”
Dr. Deidiker ordered a toxicology report, which found methamphetamine in the baby’s
blood. Although Dr. Deidiker did not know what methamphetamine levels were toxic in infants,
he testified the methamphetamine “may have caused the prematurity.” Nonetheless, Dr. Deidiker
restated “the cause of death was complications of prematurity.”
During both direct and cross-examination, Dr. Deidiker was repeatedly questioned about
E.B.’s chances of survival if he were born in a hospital or had medical care summoned
immediately upon his birth. Dr. Deidiker did not give a precise answer. Instead, he stated that in
the absence of medical attention, the baby had “zero chance of survival.” Dr. Deidiker then
admitted he could not estimate how enhanced E.B.’s survival odds would have been had he been
born in a hospital, explaining “each case is individual.” Dr. Deidiker only went so far as to say it
would have been “less likely” the baby would have died if born in a hospital.
On May 16, 2019, the trial court found Appellant guilty of the lesser offense of class B
felony of abuse or neglect of a child. At the sentencing hearing on July 19, 2019, Appellant
asked the court to reconsider its decision in light of new caselaw, citing State v. Usnick, 585
S.W.3d 298 (Mo. App. W.D. 2019). However, the trial court held Usnick only further justified
its decision to find Appellant guilty of the lesser version of the crime, which does not require
death to result, because it could not say with confidence that Appellant’s actions caused the
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baby’s death. The court stated “you could have done everything right and the baby may not have
survived. And we also know that to be the case.” The court explained that it found Appellant
guilty of the lesser crime because there was a “physical injury that [created] a substantial risk of
death.” The court held it “was convinced beyond any doubt that the act of not getting any
medical treatment immediately upon the birth of this child certainly caused a substantial risk of
death, and that was based on the testimony of Dr. Deidiker, and again, given other evidence that
I found.”
Appellant was sentenced to 20 years in prison. This appeal follows.
Points Relied On
Appellant makes two claims of error on this appeal. Point I claims the trial court erred in
finding Appellant guilty because the State did not present sufficient evidence to prove beyond a
reasonable doubt that Appellant’s neglect caused E.B.’s injuries and substantial risk of death.
Point II claims the trial court plainly erred by proceeding without a jury because Appellant did
not clearly waive her right to a trial by jury.
Point I
Standard of Review
Appellant’s sufficiency of evidence claim is automatically preserved for appellate review.
State v. Claycomb, 470 S.W.3d 358, 361 (Mo. banc 2015) (“[Appellant’s] claim that the
evidence was insufficient to support his conviction is preserved on appeal even if not raised or
not timely raised in the trial court.”). Additionally, “[t]he standard of review in a court-tried case
is the same as in a jury-tried case.” State v. McKinney, 253 S.W.3d 110, 113 (Mo. App. W.D.
2008).
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In determining whether evidence is sufficient to support the conviction, this Court’s role
is “limited to determining whether there is sufficient evidence from which a reasonable juror
might have found the defendant guilty beyond a reasonable doubt.” State v. Crawford, 68
S.W.3d 406, 408 (Mo. banc 2002). We accept as true all evidence and reasonable inferences
which support the conviction, and ignore all contrary evidence and inferences. State v. Ess, 453
S.W.3d 196, 206 (Mo. banc 2015). However, this Court “may not supply missing evidence, or
give the [State] the benefit of unreasonable, speculative or forced inferences.” State v. Clark, 490
S.W.3d 704, 707 (Mo. banc 2016) (quoting State v. Whalen, 49 S.W.3d 181, 184 (Mo. banc
2001)).
Discussion
Appellant argues the trial court erred in overruling her motion for judgment of acquittal at
the close of all evidence and finding her guilty of the class B felony of abuse or neglect of a child
because the State’s evidence was insufficient to prove beyond a reasonable doubt that her neglect
knowingly caused E.B.’s physical injuries and resulting substantial risk of death. Section
568.060.21 defines the felony of abuse or neglect of a child as:
A person commits the offense of abuse or neglect of a child if such person
knowingly causes a child who is less than eighteen years of age:
(1) To suffer physical or mental injury as a result of abuse or neglect; or
(2) To be placed in a situation in which the child may suffer physical or mental
injury as the result of abuse or neglect.
(emphasis added).
Section 568.060.1(4) defines neglect as:
[T]he failure to provide, by those responsible for the care, custody, and control of
a child under the age of eighteen years, the care reasonable and necessary to
1
Statutory citations are to RSMo 2016, unless otherwise noted.
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maintain the physical and mental health of the child, when such failure presents a
substantial probability that death or physical injury or sexual injury would
result[.]
Specifically, Section 568.060.5 states:
5. The offense of abuse or neglect of a child is:
(1) A class D felony, without eligibility for probation, parole, or conditional
release until the defendant has served no less than one year of such sentence,
unless the person has previously been found guilty of a violation of this section or
of a violation of the law of any other jurisdiction that prohibits the same or similar
conduct or the injury inflicted on the child is a serious emotional injury or a
serious physical injury, in which case abuse or neglect of a child is a class B
felony, without eligibility for probation or parole until the defendant has served
not less than five years of such sentence; or
(2) A class A felony if the child dies as a result of injuries sustained from conduct
chargeable under the provisions of this section.
Section 568.060.1(5) defines physical injury as:
[P]hysical pain, illness, or any impairment of physical condition, including but not
limited to bruising, lacerations, hematomas, welts, or permanent or temporary
disfigurement and impairment of any bodily function or organ[.]
Section 568.060.1(7) defines serious physical injury as:
[A] physical injury that creates a substantial risk of death or that causes serious
disfigurement or protracted loss or impairment of the function of any part of the
body.
Appellant argues the plain wording of the statute requires the State prove she knowingly
caused the baby’s physical injury and substantial risk of death due to her neglect. We agree. The
State had the burden to prove beyond a reasonable doubt that Appellant’s neglect knowingly
caused E.B.’s physical injury and the resulting substantial risk of death.
In State v. Usnick, Usnick was convicted of first-degree involuntary manslaughter
following the death of her newborn daughter. Usnick did not tell anyone she was pregnant and
smoked meth and marijuana the night before giving birth. Id. at 301. On January 15, 2009,
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Usnick began experiencing pain and contractions, so she went into the bathroom and began
pushing. Id. Eventually, the baby came out and landed in the toilet. Id. Usnick was only able to
pull the baby out of the toilet after taking a few minutes to recover. Id. at 302. At that point, she
noticed the baby was not breathing and feared the baby drowned or suffocated in the toilet. Id.
Usnick then got dressed, placed the baby in a plastic bag which she put in a tote, and put the tote
in the trunk of her car. Id. Usnick did not mention what happened to anyone and told the
presumed father she had given the baby away to a cousin in Mexico. Id. On February 3, 2009,
the police discovered the baby while conducting an unrelated methamphetamine investigation.
Id. Usnick initially denied the baby was hers. Id.
Usnick was charged with second degree murder for having recklessly caused the death of
her baby. At trial, three physicians testified regarding the baby’s death. Dr. Carl Stacy performed
the autopsy and testified the baby could have been resuscitated if born in the hospital or in the
presence of someone with medical training. Id. at 303. Dr. Christopher Long conducted the
toxicology report and determined there was methamphetamine in the baby’s internal organs,
meaning the baby’s heart had to be beating for the drugs to transfer from Usnick into the baby’s
tissues. Id. Finally, Dr. Douglas Miller testified that he did not find anything in the baby’s brain
which would have contributed to the cause of death. Id. Ultimately, the jury found Usnick guilty
of the lesser included offense of involuntary manslaughter for recklessly causing the death of her
baby “by giving birth to said child unattended and failing to secure assistance and medical
attention for said child following birth and by enclosing [the] child in a plastic bag and
container.” Id. at 301, 304.
On appeal, the Western District emphasized State v. Wade, 232 S.W.3d 663, 665 (Mo.
App. W.D. 2007), which holds that mothers cannot be prosecuted for indirect harm caused to
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their unborn children by ingesting illegal drugs during pregnancy. Usnick, 585 S.W.3d at 305.
Next, the court held “Usnick’s medically unattended delivery of Baby Usnick cannot support
criminal prosecution as a matter of law.” Id. at 305. The court then turned to the issue of whether
Usnick’s failure to secure assistance or medical attention following birth caused the baby’s
death. Moreover, while it was unclear whether Baby Usnick was alive at birth, the court assumed
the baby was alive and instead focused its inquiry upon whether Usnick’s post birth actions and
inactions caused her baby’s death. Id. The court emphasized “[t]he State is required to prove the
cause of death beyond reasonable doubt.” Id. Additionally, the court discussed the “corpus
delicti,” which requires the State to prove the criminal agency of another caused the victim’s
death. Id. Notably, because “[h]ypoxia can result from natural causes as well as criminal acts,”
the State needed to prove the death was “caused by a criminal act” and not “self-inflicted, due to
natural causes, or an accident.” Id. at 305-06. Examining the medical testimony, which “was the
entirety of the evidence submitted by the State to establish the cause of Baby Usnick’s hypoxia
[death],” the court held:
Even when read in the light most favorable to the verdict, the testimony of the
expert witnesses was that the cause of the hypoxia (the theory of death entered by
the State) was unknown and merely that had the birth been attended by a medical
professional, Baby Usnick may have survived. We have already explained why
Baby Usnick’s unattended birth cannot support criminal culpability. None of the
expert witnesses testified that but for Usnick’s failure to seek medical assistance
after Baby Usnick’s birth, Baby Usnick would not have died.
Id. at 307.
The court found it significant that the medical testimony did not “determine within a
reasonable degree of medical certainty a clear cause of death” and therefore there would be no
way for a lay juror to determine whether the death was caused by a criminal act as opposed to a
natural cause. Id. at 308. The medical testimony “left open the possibility that Baby Usnick’s
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oxygen deprivation was due to natural causes.” Id. at 306. Notably, “there was no evidence to
support a finding that immediately summoning medical assistance after the birth would have
prevented Baby Usnick’s death” and therefore, “there was insufficient evidence to submit this to
the jury as a cause of Baby Usnick’s death.” Id. at 308.
In contrast, the State points to State v. Scroggs, 521 S.W.3d 649 (Mo. App. W.D. 2017)
as the applicable precedent. In Scroggs, Scroggs and her husband did not tell anyone of her
pregnancy. 521 S.W.3d at 652. Scroggs used methamphetamine and marijuana throughout her
pregnancy. Scroggs stated the baby was born between five to seven months into the pregnancy
and initially looked fine. Id. at 653. Scroggs also claimed to have called a doctor, whom she
picked out of a phone book, who told her everything was fine. Scroggs went to sleep and when
she woke up, the baby was dead. At that point, she put the baby in a box and gave him to her
husband, who subsequently put the baby in a blue bucket and filled the bucket with concrete. Id.
at 652-53. The crime was eventually discovered when Scroggs’s mother-in-law reported them to
the police. Id. at 652. An autopsy later revealed the baby appeared to be full term and had a
methamphetamine level of 751 ng/mL in his system. It was determined the baby’s cause of death
was “methamphetamine intoxication due to maternal methamphetamine use.” Id. at 653. A jury
found Scroggs guilty of child endangerment, felony murder, and abandonment of a corpse. Id.
On appeal, the Western District affirmed the trial court’s judgment. The court first noted
“[a] parent’s failure to provide or obtain adequate medical care for a child can be the basis for a
child endangerment conviction.” Id. at 654 (quoting State v. Rinehart, 383 S.W.3d 95, 101 (Mo.
App. W.D. 2012)). Next, the court addressed the main issue, whether Scroggs acted “knowingly”
under the child endangerment statute.2 Scroggs, 521 S.W.3d at 654. The court explained that
2
There is no requirement that the defendant actually cause harm to the child under Missouri’s child endangerment
statute.
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proving a state of mind, such as knowing, is rarely possible and thus “knowingly” can be proven
based on the totality of the circumstances, including from circumstantial evidence. Applying this
standard, the court held the evidence sufficient to establish Scroggs acted knowingly, in a
manner which created a substantial risk to the baby. The court stated “Scroggs’s conduct before,
during, and after the pregnancy are all indicative that she knew her methamphetamine use would
harm her child.”3 Id. at 655. The court also reasoned the jury could have disregarded Scroggs’s
testimony as not credible. Finally, the court addressed the second-degree felony murder charge,
holding the death was a natural and proximate result of the defendant’s felony of child
endangerment.4 Id. at 655-56.
Usnick and Scroggs show the significant discretion granted to prosecutors in deciding
how to charge cases involving failure to seek care for newborns. Prosecutors are free to choose
between charging child endangerment, child neglect, or involuntary manslaughter, with the
potential to add a felony murder charge. Here, the State charged Appellant with child neglect,
which, as both parties agreed during oral argument, is a statute that specifically requires the
defendant to “knowingly cause” a child to suffer harm. Therefore, like involuntary manslaughter,
child neglect requires causation to be proven beyond a reasonable doubt.5 In contrast, child
endangerment contains no such requirement and can lead to conviction in cases where the
3
To the extent Scroggs utilizes circumstantial evidence from before the baby’s birth such as drug use and failure to
seek prenatal care, we find reliance on such evidence in violation of Usnick, 585 S.W.3d 298 (regarding unattended
birth) and Wade, 232 S.W.3d 663 (regarding drug use).
4
The State cites to numerous felony murder cases to argue that Appellant is responsible for any injuries that are the
natural and proximate result of the commission of the felony. However, this is not a felony murder case and the
contributing proximate cause standard does not govern here.
5
The Missouri Supreme Court has long held that actual, “[b]ut for [causation] is an absolute minimum for causation
because it is merely causation in fact.” Callahan v. Cardinal Glennon Hosp., 863 S.W.2d 852, 862 (Mo. banc 1993).
“[A]ctual causation, or causation in fact, is the same analytically in criminal law and tort law.” State v. Burton, 370
S.W.3d 926, 931 n.3 (Mo. App. E.D. 2012).
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defendant did not cause harm. Thus, while both Usnick and Scroggs were frequently cited by the
parties, we find Usnick to be more applicable to the case at hand.
Like in Usnick, here the evidence is not sufficient to establish that Appellant’s post-birth
neglect knowingly caused E.B. to suffer physical injuries resulting in a substantial risk of death.
While Usnick presented the medical testimony of three experts, here the only medical testimony
came from Dr. Deidiker, a forensic pathologist who admitted that questions regarding treatment
were better suited for a neonatologist. Dr. Deidiker did not “provide an opinion within a
reasonable degree of medical certainty” as to whether Appellant’s inaction caused the baby to
suffer physical injuries resulting in a substantial risk of death. Usnick, 585 S.W.3d at 306. While
Dr. Deidiker did state with confidence that E.B.’s injuries and death were due to extreme
prematurity, potentially brought about by Appellant’s methamphetamine use, this Court cannot
consider Appellant’s actions before the baby’s birth. Wade, 232 S.W.3d at 665. Dr. Deidiker did
not provide testimony explaining how Appellant’s failure to get E.B. medical treatment caused
his physical injuries. Instead, all of Dr. Deidiker’s post-birth medical testimony focused on the
baby’s preexisting injuries from having been born extremely premature. Again, these are injuries
and a resulting risk of death which we cannot consider because Appellant’s post-birth actions did
not cause them.
Accordingly, we find the trial court supplied missing evidence and gave “the State the
benefit of unreasonable, speculative or forced inferences.” Clark, 490 S.W.3d at 707. The trial
court held that because Appellant’s neglect created a substantial risk of physical injury, the risk
itself was sufficient to show injury. However, without medical testimony, we cannot conclude
that but for Appellant’s failure to seek medical treatment, E.B. would not have suffered the same
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physical injuries.6 “He thus offered no opinion permitting a reasonable inference that the cause
of [injury and death] was a criminal act, and was not instead a natural peril of child birth.”
Usnick, 585 S.W.3d at 306. See also Patel v. State, 60 N.E.3d 1041, 1052–53 (Ind. Ct. App.
2016) (“[T]he State was required to prove beyond a reasonable doubt that the baby’s death
would not have occurred but for Patel’s failure to provide medical care immediately after its
birth.”). The trial court should not have supplied missing evidence for the State and inferred
injury from Appellant’s failure to seek medical treatment.
Similarly, the State failed to provide any medical testimony explaining how medical
treatment would have alleviated E.B.’s injuries. Without such testimony, we cannot conclude
that Appellant’s failure to seek medical attention caused the baby to suffer physical injuries and a
resulting substantial risk of death. Only a forced inference would allow us to reach a conclusion
that medical treatment would have prevented E.B.’s injuries and resulting substantial risk of
death. Without medical testimony, we cannot conclude that but for the baby not receiving
treatment, he would not have suffered the same physical injuries.
In conclusion, the State did not provide clear proof that Appellant’s inaction caused
E.B.’s serious injuries and substantial risk of death, and therefore we see no way a factfinder
could have found such evidence to be sufficient. As in Usnick, examining the medical testimony
6
The State has also argued in its brief that the offense of neglect of a child could have been committed by
knowingly causing E.B. “to be placed in a situation in which the child may suffer physical injury as the result of
abuse or neglect.” Section 568.060.2(2). In reply, Appellant has argued that allowing such a variance between the
actual charge and the basis submitted for conviction would result in a due process violation. Additionally, we do not
find that portion of the statute applicable for two reasons. First, that section still requires Appellant to have
knowingly caused the situation. Therefore, without more, we do not see why causation would be met under that
section when it still cannot be shown that E.B. suffered physical injury as a result of Appellant’s inaction, as
opposed to as a result of his extreme prematurity. Second, we are not convinced that Section 568.060.2(2) even
applies to situations such as this. E.B. was already in the precarious situation the moment he was born extremely
premature and Appellant cannot be criminally responsible for having birthed him. The State cited a child
endangerment case for its support but the medical testimony was significantly different, State v. Fowler, 435 S.W.3d
90, 95 (Mo. App. S.D. 2014), and logically it would appear Section 568.060.2(2) should apply in situations such as
when a parent leaves a child with someone they know to be dangerous or abusive.
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which was the entirety of the State’s case as to the cause of E.B.’s death, even when read in a
light most favorable to the verdict, there was no evidence that immediately summoning medical
attention after the birth would have prevented or alleviated the baby’s physical injuries. For this
reason, we reverse and remand.
Point II
Because we reverse Appellant’s class B felony of abuse or neglect of a child in Point I,
we need not address Appellant’s second claim that the trial court plainly erred when it proceeded
to trial without a jury absent a clear jury waiver from Appellant in open court and entered of
record.
Conclusion
The judgment of the trial court is reversed. We enter judgment of acquittal and order
appellant discharged.
SHERRI B. SULLIVAN, J.
Robin Ransom, P.J., and
Lisa P. Page, J., concur.
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