The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Ex-Tech star, wife get 20 years

Couple convicted last week on three counts of child cruelty.

- By Amanda C. Coyne amanda.coyne@coxinc.com

Former Georgia Tech linebacker Recardo Wimbush and his wife, Therian Wimbush, were sentenced to 20 years in prison and 10 on probation Monday morning.

The pair were each convicted on three counts of second-degree child cruelty Friday; they kept their oldest son in a small, darkened basement room for 18 months, which Gwinnett County Magistrate Court Judge Deborah Fluker called “unusual, inhumane and harsh treatment.” The Wimbushes also did not seek medical care for another child who had a large skin tumor on his abdomen.

The Atlanta Journal-Constituti­on is not identifyin­g any of the 10 Wimbush children because they are juveniles and because two are victims of abuse.

Recardo Wimbush and Therian Wimbush will be barred from contacting the two sons who were abused, now 16 and 10, until they are 21 years old. They are permitted to see their other eight children in supervised visits before they are 18. All contact between parents and children must be initiated by the children.

The two had no visible reaction as the sentence came down.

Therian Wimbush claimed all responsibi­lity for keeping her oldest son in the basement in her statement to Fluker before the sentence was given. In an emotional speech, Therian Wimbush tearfully told Fluker that she only sought to prevent a troubled life for her son.

“This entire situation lies on my shoulders. I saw that my oldest son stood literally at the wide gate that leads to the road of possibilit­ies that leads ultimately to destructio­n,” Therian Wimbush said. “The most frightenin­g thought for me was not his death, but walking the path that two of his uncles had walked: the prison pipeline.”

She asked for contact with her children, saying she wanted to hug her oldest son and tell him, “It was all Mommy’s fault, it wasn’t Daddy’s fault.”

Recardo Wimbush asked for mercy, portraying himself as a hardworkin­g father who took on 12-hour shifts as a railroad manager and tried to encourage his children to be the best at what-

ever was their passion.

Both parents asked to be sentenced for time served, with any additional sentence being served on probation. The Wimbushes have been held without bond for 31 months following their June 2014 arrest.

Gwinnett County Chief Assistant District Attorney Dan Mayfield asked the judge for the sentence that was given: 20 years in prison and 10 years on probation. Each count of second-degree child cruelty carries a maximum sentence of 10 years.

The sentencing hearing largely focused on whether the Wimbushes could remain in contact with their 10 children, whose ages range from 3 to 16.

Leanne Chancey, the guardian ad litem for all 10 Wimbush children, had recommende­d the parents have no contact with any of the children until they were 18 years old.

The only contact the Wimbushes have had with their children since June 2014 was when they questioned their children as witnesses in the trial.

All the children, including the son who was kept in the basement, want to have contact with their parents, Chancey said. But Chancey recommende­d the no-contact order because, after discussion­s with the children’s foster parents and mental health providers, she believes contact could have a negative impact on their mental health and perhaps trigger acting out “in a misguided attempt” to disrupt a foster home placement and get back into their parents’ custody.

Darice Good, a lawyer for eight of the Wimbush children, asked that the children have “closely monitored” contact with their parents. Good characteri­zed the children as “thriving” in their foster homes, “partially due to how well they were raised” by Recardo Wimbush and Therian Wimbush.

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