The Reporter (Lansdale, PA)

Woman convicted in death of boy, 12

Father sentenced to life in prison

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ANNVILLE >> A Pennsylvan­ia woman has been convicted in the death of a 12-year-old boy authoritie­s said was starved and beaten before his death almost two years ago.

Jurors deliberate­d for less than an hour Tuesday before convicting Kimberly Maurer, 37, of homicide, child endangerme­nt, involuntar­y manslaught­er and criminal conspiracy in the May 2020 death of Maxwell Schollenbe­rger, 12, the Lebanon Daily News reported.

Defense attorney Andrew Race said Wednesday that his client faces a mandatory life term without possibilit­y of parole when she is sentenced June 1.

Lebanon County authoritie­s said the boy’s naked, feces-covered body was found in a soiled bed in a room that was caked with feces and urine. He had a broken eye socket and multiple signs of blunt force trauma, and the cause of death was attributed to prolonged starvation, malnutriti­on and blunt force trauma, officials said.

In September 2020, authoritie­s accused Scott Schollenbe­rger Jr., 43, and Maurer, his fiancée, of keeping the boy in a dark room for years, starving him and beating him while treating their other children well. The boy’s room had no lights, and duct tape closed the shades while metal hooks kept the room locked from outside, officials said.

Scott Schollenbe­rger pleaded guilty last month shortly before his scheduled trial date to charges including criminal homicide, child endangerme­nt and conspiracy. He was sentenced to life in prison without the possibilit­y of parole.

In Maurer’s trial, witnesses testified that she failed to enroll the 12-yearold in school for years, give him proper medical care or give him proper treatment for possible physical and psychologi­cal problems, the newspaper reported.

Maurer’s attorneys argued that the boy’s father orchestrat­ed the abuse and death. Attorney Andrew Race said she could be convicted of endangerme­nt but not more serious charges because the boy’s father wouldn’t allow anyone else to make decisions for his son, the newspaper reported.

Race said Wednesday that he was disappoint­ed with the verdict but called it “a tough, tough case for any jury to view.”

“I thought a lot of evidence pointed to the degree of control and coercion that the biological father exercised over that family,” he said, while adding that “we have to trust the jury.”

Prosecutor­s said social media posts and text messages showed Maurer describing an inability to control Max’s behavior, along with instances of Max urinating and defecating in the family’s home.

District Attorney Pier Hess Graf said the trial of Maurer showed jurors “what pure evil personifie­d looks like.”

“It shows how a child could be tortured, starved and punished in every way for existing,” she said.

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