How A 31-Year-Old Mother Left Her Two Daughters, Aged 2 And 3, To Die In Hot Car While Gambling At Casino
Launice Shanique Battle, was sentenced on Thursday, July 25, 2024 after she pleaded guilty to the murder of her daughters, Trinity Milbourne, two, and Amora, three.
Launice Shanique Battle, a 31-year-old mother has been sentenced to prison.
The young woman was sentenced for causing the death of her two daughters after she left them inside a car in sweltering weather while she gambled at a casino in North Carolina, U.S.
Launice Shanique Battle, was sentenced on Thursday, July 25, 2024 after she pleaded guilty to the murder of her daughters, Trinity Milbourne, two, and Amora, three.
Autopsy revealed that the girls d!ed of hyperthermia, which occurs when the body is exposed to extremely high temperatures.
Battle will serve a sentence of a little over seven years, with a possibility of up to 10 and a half years.
She was initially charged with two counts of felony murder, facing over 80 years in prison.
However, she reached a plea deal with the prosecution and pleaded guilty to second-degree murder.
The judge determined that her guilty plea demonstrated her acceptance of responsibility for her actions, warranting a lesser sentence.
Battle was arrested in August 27, 2022 after she went to a casino in Raleigh and left her children in the car while she gambled for six hours.
On that day, Battle parked her car partially in the shade while temperatures soared to 35°C.
It was reported that she left the children at 2:30pm and only returned at 8:30pm and found them unconscious.
She rushed the girls to hospital where they were immediately pronounced dead.
A medical report stated that the girls’ remains were already in stages of ‘mild decomposition’ when they were found.
Meanwhile, Battles’ cousin, Keisha Harris, spoke to WRAL and described her cousin as a responsible parent who just did a ‘careless mistake’
“She was a young girl who might have been experiencing depression or whatever the case may be, she just made a bad decision,” Harris said.
“She was always there. She’s a caring and loving mother to her kids at the end of the day. She’s not a cold-blooded m@rderer. She’s not a k!ller."
Other family members said the deaths were “a careless mistake.
Another cousin, Lisacious Williams, said the family loves “Launice no matter what, and we will support her no matter what.