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GOLDEN, Colo. (AP) A therapist was sentenced to 16 years in
prison Monday in the death of a 10-year-old girl who suffocated
while wrapped in blankets during a "rebirthing" session.
Connell Watkins, 54, received the minimum sentence for the death
of Candace Newmaker. The therapist could have gotten 48 years
behind bars.
"I failed Candace and I failed her mother," Watkins told Judge
Jane Tidball. "I failed to keep Candace out of harm's way."
The girl was covered in blankets and pillows meant to simulate
the womb and was encouraged to push her way out during the April
2000 session. Therapists hoped she would emerge "reborn" to bond
with her adoptive mother.
A jury convicted Watkins of reckless child abuse in April. A
second therapist, Julie Ponder, who led the session in Watkins'
home, was convicted of the same charge and awaited sentencing later
Monday.
Prosecutor Steve Jensen argued for the maximum sentence, saying
Watkins had shown little remorse. He called the therapy "torturous
cruelty of a sickening and depraved nature."
But the judge noted that Watkins had no criminal record and said
there was no indication she had ever meant to hurt Candace. Tidball
said the sentence would send a powerful message to other
therapists.
A videotape of the 70-minute therapy session was shown to the
jury. Four adults leaned on Candace with pillows, applying several
hundred pounds of pressure.
The girl had been diagnosed with attachment disorder, in which
children resist forming loving relationships and are violent and
unmanageable.
Colorado has since outlawed the New Age form of therapy.
Candace's adoptive mother, Jeane Newmaker, is scheduled to go on
trial in November on charges of criminally negligent child abuse.
Watkins' office manager and an intern await trial in September
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