Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Stepmom sentenced in killing of toddler

Texarkana woman gets life in prison

- LYNN LAROWE

TEXARKANA — A woman who beat her husband’s 3-yearold daughter to death using steel-toed boots and a wooden bed slat in 2019 was sentenced Tuesday to life in prison as part of a plea agreement in Miller County circuit court.

McKenna Faith Belcher, 29, avoided a possible death sentence with her plea of guilty to first-degree murder, but she is expected to spend the remainder of her days in an Arkansas prison for taking the life of McKinley McCawley.

“It just doesn’t seem fair that McKinley gets death and McKenna Belcher gets life,” the victim’s grandmothe­r said as she addressed the court Tuesday morning. “What could a 3-year-old little girl have done to deserve this? It breaks my heart knowing what was done to her, but the nightmares I have are nothing compared to the nightmare McKinley lived.”

Belcher appeared at the hearing before Circuit Judge Wren Autrey with Andrea Stokes and Jeffrey Chandler, both of the Arkansas Public Defender Commission. As Chief Deputy Prosecutin­g Attorney Connie Mitchell provided the court with a factual basis for Belcher’s plea for the official record, members of McKinley’s family, court staff and a Miller County correction­al officer wiped at their eyes.

Mitchell recounted that McKinley was flown by helicopter from a Texarkana emergency room to a hospital in Little Rock the morning of April 2, 2019. Mitchell noted that McKinley was found to have suffered bruising as well as severe internal and head injuries from which she would die later the same day.

McKinley’s aunt and great grandmothe­r described seeing McKinley motionless in a hospital bed with tubes and machines keeping her alive.

“She had a laugh, a laugh that went to the biggest smile on anyone’s face,” McKinley’s aunt said. “I wish that when I dream of her I was surrounded by that laugh instead of touching that lifeless little hand.”

McKinley’s grandmothe­r lamented that the “vibrant, joyful, little 3-year-old” who was beaten to death would never have the “firsts” in life that benchmark a human lifespan, such as the first day of school.

“She was more than a victim. She was a little girl. A human being,” the grandmothe­r said.

McKinley’s grandmothe­r referred to a necklace she wears to feel a connection to McKinley.

“We should get to hug her, but instead we’re left with tiny vials of her ashes,” the grandmothe­r said.

As the hearing wound to a close, Autrey looked from the judge’s bench at McKinley’s family.

“There’s nothing I can say that will make this any better,” Autrey said.

Mitchell said that, as part of Belcher’s plea agreement, prosecutor­s agreed to drop a charge related to child abuse injuries found on McKinley’s younger brother.

“I am pleased we were able to resolve this matter with the family’s support,” Mitchell said. “With the defendant’s plea, there is no appeal. McKinley’s family can begin the healing process and mourn the loss of their daughter, granddaugh­ter and great granddaugh­ter. In Arkansas, with a sentence of life in prison, there is no parole without an act of the governor.”

McKinley’s father, Everette Cawley, faces criminal charges in Miller County as well. Pending against him are two counts of permitting the abuse of a minor involving McKinley and her brother and a count of accomplice capital murder.

Belcher threw, kicked, stomped and beat McKinley in the days and hours before her death. McKinley’s head had been shaved before she was brought to the hospital, and clumps of hair were found in the couple’s Texarkana duplex and in McKinley’s underwear. Investigat­ors with the Texarkana, Ark., Police Department concluded that McKinley’s head was shaved to conceal that clumps of her hair had been yanked from her scalp.

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