Dayton Daily News

Woman found guilty of killing 7-month-old

- By Jennifer Feehan

Babies don’t just go limp and die.

And the only person who was caring for 7-month-old Levi Ashley when he went limp and died last year was Angie Walker.

A jury in Lucas County Common Pleas Court deliberate­d just four hours Thursday before finding Walker, 41, of the 300 block of East Broadway guilty of murder, felonious assault, and endangerin­g children for causing the death of her boyfriend’s infant son last year. She was found not guilty on a more serious charge of aggravated murder.

Walker is to be sentenced Thursday by Judge Linda Jennings.

“Angie Walker purposeful­ly shook and abused Levi, causing his death,” Jennifer Donovan, an assistant county prosecutor, told the jury in her closing argument. “You don’t accidental­ly grab a 7-month-old around the head. There’s nothing accidental about that.”

Oregon police and paramedics were called about 10:40 a.m. April 25, 2017, to a Waterfox Drive home where Walker and her boyfriend, Antonio Burkey, were staying at the time on a report of an unresponsi­ve baby. The child was rushed to the hospital and died the next day at Mercy Health St. Vincent Medical Center when life-support was removed.

Walker, who did not take the witness stand, told police in videotaped interviews shown to the jury that she was alone with the child that morning when he suddenly went limp. He had been healthy and fine before that, she said.

Charles McDonald, an assistant county prosecutor, told the jury the evidence showed Walker was lying.

Levi’s retinas were detached, he said, a condition that results exclusivel­y from trauma. He argued that Walker shook the child with such force that he immediatel­y went limp, was effectivel­y brain dead before he ever got to the hospital.

“This case is about the eyes,” McDonald said. “It cannot be explained by attacking the medical. Only a human being could have done that, and only one human being was present.”

Defense attorney Lorin Zaner told the jury that while it’s natural to want to blame someone for an infant’s death, there was no evidence presented to prove that Walker inflicted fatal injuries to Levi.

“The state is trying to convince you this was inflicted, intentiona­l injury with no evidence of any of that happening,” he said. “It’s just as logical, if not more logical, it’s from infection.”

Zaner argued that the child had pneumonia, which could have led to sepsis. He attacked the autopsy performed by Dr. Jeffrey Hudson, a deputy Lucas County coroner, alleging Hudson did not follow protocol and filed a flawed and incomplete report.

Hudson concluded that Levi’s death was a homicide caused by abusive head trauma.

He and other medical experts testified that the symptoms he exhibited would have occurred immediatel­y after that trauma occurred.

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