"After
a second trial and for the second time, a jury will begin to deliberate
in the murder and child-abuse case against Leo Ackley. Calhoun
County Circuit Court jurors heard the final witnesses and the final
arguments Tuesday. Seven women and five men will return Wednesday to
meet privately and decide if Ackley, 30, of Battle Creek, is guilty or
innocent in the 2011 death of his former girlfriend’s daughter in Battle
Creek. Baylee Stenman, 3, died from what doctors said
was head trauma, but the focus of the week-long trial in Calhoun County
Circuit Court was how it occurred and who might have caused it. Ackley
was convicted and sentenced to life in prison for the child's death,
but last year the Michigan Supreme Court granted him a new trial because
his first trial attorney did not present an expert to contradict
prosecution witnesses who testified about the cause of death. The
trial before Circuit Judge John Hallacy began last week. If convicted
on both charges Ackley will again face a sentence of life in prison
without parole. Jurors heard Tuesday from a pathologist
called by the defense who said the medical investigation was flawed, as
the defense attempted to question the science behind the diagnosis of
abusive head trauma or shaken-baby syndrome. Dr. Ljabisa
Dragovic, Oakland County medical examiner, was questioned by defense
attorney Andrew Rodenhouse and told jurors that the autopsy conducted on
the child's body by the Calhoun County medical examiner was incomplete
and did not prove when or how the child was injured. Prosecutors have alleged that Ackley injured the little girl on July 28, 2011, while he was caring for her. “I
can’t say that was the day she was injured,” Dragovic said, complaining
not enough microscopic slides were taken of the child's brain. “With
one single sample you have a limitation,” he said. “I need additional
sampling to make a determination. If you don’t have something to
interpret you don’t know. This autopsy fell short of providing adequate
physical evidence.” While doctors called by the
prosecution said the severe head injury suffered by the girl would have
created immediate symptoms, Dragovic said his analysis was there could
have been slow bleeding in the brain that eventually caused the child to
collapse. She was taken off life support on Aug. 2, 2011, after treatment at Bronson Methodist Hospital in Kalamazoo. Dragovic
said his review of photographs and microscopic slides of the brain
show the injury could have occurred a week before the autopsy but he
said he believed the autopsy did not provide enough evidence to be sure. Ackley's
mother, Linda Byrd, told the jury during questioning by Rodenhouse and
Chief Assistant Prosecutor Daniel Buscher that the child had fallen and
hit her head while jumping into a small pool at her home on July 23. "She seemed startled but I didn't see anything," Byrd said. "I didn't see any obvious injuries and she went back to playing." Byrd
said she never told investigators about the fall. She also complained
that police immediately began accusing her son of injuring Baylee
without investigating other possible causes. "They said
he needed to tell them something or he was going to prison for the rest
of his life, that is what stuck in my mind," Byrd said. “I’m
going to prison for this,” Calhoun County Assistant Prosecutor Karen
Pawloski, quoted Ackley as saying as the girl was being treated at
Bronson Methodist Hospital in Kalamazoo. “They were the
words of a person who knew his criminal misconduct injured and
eventually killed a little girl,” Pawloski told jurors in her closing
arguments. But Rodenhouse said they were only the words of a man who saw police jumping to conclusions without evidence. Pawloski
and Rodenhouse asked jurors to review the evidence and the
assistant prosecutor said it will show Ackley is guilty of child abuse
and felony murder.“ Where is the evidence?” Rodenhouse rebutted. “How do you prove you didn’t do something?” Ackley
told investigators he found the child unresponsive and on the floor
next to her bed in the early afternoon on that Thursday. And Rodenhouse argued prosecutors couldn’t prove Ackley had anything to do with the girl’s injuries. Pawloski countered that “this is not from a trip or a fall, because if that was true every kid would die every day.”.........Rodenhouse
told jurors in his closing that, "this is a tragic case, but you might
never know what happened because they didn’t prove their case." The death of the child was tragic, he said, but convicting Ackley would be a travesty."
http://www.battlecreekenquirer.com/story/news/crime/2016/10/18/pathologist-disputes-autopsy-findings-childs-death/92374472/