Daughter: Annabelle (dead). Oda also ruled that the burial property would need to be accessible to the family of Trey Johnson, the baby’s father. Husband/Spouse Name: None. And it should be guarded in all respects," he later said.On Thursday, a Warren County jury found Richardson not guilty of aggravated murder, involuntary manslaughter and child endangerment.
"My friends and family will tell you I've become withdrawn, cut off in a shell of the outgoing person I've always been. "Instead, I get to send two balloons to heaven with notes telling her how much her daddy loves her, how much I love her," Tracy Johnson said.She faced up to a year in prison on that conviction.But, her defense lawyers argued that the baby, who was named Annabelle, was stillborn at delivery. "As hard as I've tried to find the right word to describe -- broken, shattered, destroyed -- none of them seem to fit the amount of pain I've felt," Trey Johnson's mother, Tracy Johnson, told the court Friday during the sentencing hearing.24/7 coverage of breaking news and live events"In all of this mess that we have with this case, I think what often gets overlooked, Miss Richardson, is just how precious life is.
“Two years, four months and one week," Tracy Johnson said.
Brooke Skylar Richardson, from Ohio, US, had been accused of smashing her … They were instead given to Richardson's family. They were instead given to Richardson's family.
The family of the baby's father, Trey Johnson, had sought the remains of Annabelle. Brooke is the cheerleader at the National Honor Society. Johnson’s mother, Tracy, gave an emotional statement before Richardson’s sentencing on Friday, saying the past two years have been extremely challenging for the family.“They had made plans now for more than two years to have a proper burial, proper memorial service, but we’ve asked them, even without having Annabelle back, asked them to hold off on balloon releases and a lot of things they’ve wanted to do because of the pending case,” Rittgers said.Warren County Common Pleas Judge Donald Oda II made that determination on Friday after Richardson was sentenced to no jail time and three years of community control for abuse of corpse for burying the baby. THE cheerleader who buried her unwanted baby in her garden was slammed by a judge as she walked free from court on Friday.
When Richardson went to a doctor for birth control two months later, she told doctors what she had done and they called police.In police interrogation video presented in court, Richardson could be seen telling investigators in July 2017 that she did not hear a cry or a whimper and that the baby’s eyes were closed.During her trial, prosecutors maintained that she didn't want to be an 18-year-old single mother so when she gave birth, just days after attending her senior prom, she killed the baby and buried her -- never telling a soul. After a two year delay, the murder trial of Brooke Skylar Richardson, 20, has begun. "And neither am I. Andrew told about Skylar’s baby news to his colleague Dr. Casey Boyce. The mother of Trey Johnson, the father of the child, spoke in court Friday at Richardson's sentencing. Trey Johnson said in August of 2016 him and Richardson had a sexual relationship. The judge did sentence her, however, to six to 12 months in prison if she violated her probation. Private College.