New Hampshire
‘Gonna kill this kid’: N.H. mom was depriving son of nourishment before his death, texts reveal
A New Hampshire mother on Thursday pleaded guilty to murder in the 2021 death of her five-year-old son, Elijah Lewis.
Danielle Dauphinais of Merrimack appeared in Hillsborough County Superior Court on Thursday morning, shackled and wearing an orange jumpsuit. She pleaded guilty to second degree murder and two counts witness tampering in the death of her young son.
“Elijah was assaulted, starved, isolated, and neglected. He was tortured,” a prosecutor said.
The state said Elijah died between Sept. 21, 2021 and Sept. 24, 2021.
The boy was found face down in the fetal position in a shallow hole at Ames Nowell State Park in Abington.
According to prosecutors, had this case gone to trial, Dr. Richard Atkinson, who was at the burial site and conducted Elijah’s autopsy, would have said, “Elijah died as a result of violence and neglect including facial and scalp injuries, acute fentanyl intoxication, malnourishment, and pressure ulcers.”
“I am sick to my stomach and I can’t believe what I heard today. That’s not the person I knew,” MJ Morrison, Elijah’s aunt, said after Thursday’s court hearing.
Dauphinais was indicted by a grand jury on murder charges in connection with her son’s death in April 2022. Dauphinais and her boyfriend, Joseph Stapf, were originally charged with witness tampering and child endangerment. Both remain in prison.
Prosecutors said Thursday that the investigation into Elijah’s whereabouts began after Dauphinais gave birth to a baby boy and Stapf dropped the child off at Catholic Medical Center in Manchester.
The Division of Children, Youth, and Families began questioning Dauphinais about where Elijah was.
Prosecutors said she told them “Elijah was gone” and then said he was living with her sister Tracy in California. Her sister later told the social worker and investigators that Dauphinais asked her to lie and say Elijah was with her in California, but she refused.
According to cell phone records, Dauphinais was confronted again by DCYF workers, at which point she told them she sent Elijah to her brother’s house in Texas.
Her brother, Bruce, told DCYF workers he had custody of Elijah since September, not knowing it was more than a wellness check, but couldn’t provide any information on him like where he went to school. He was told to call them back but never did.
DCYF then went to Merrimack Police to report Elijah as missing.
Text messages between Dauphinais and Stapf revealed she was depriving the child of nourishment, prosecutors said in court.
“I gave him a small bowl of cereal so he would shut the **** up. But that wasn’t enough. He said he wants food and wants me to stop starving him because it’s not nice,” read one message.
“I’m gonna kill this kid joe, ****ing screaming at the top of his lungs ****ing water,” said another from Dauphinais to Stapf.
Prosecutors outlined how and when the couple buried Elijah.
Merrimack Police tracked the couple’s cell phones, finding that the pair traveled through Boston to Abington, 14 hours after investigators started asking questions.
Prosecutors said Stapf buried Elijah’s body and put a white birch tree over his grave. Then, the couple drove to Mohegan Sun, had a bite to eat, went to a country music concert and boarded a bus to New York City.
The two were arrested at a subway station in the Bronx.
Cristee Chasse went to the courthouse on Thursday wearing a shirt that read, ‘Justice for Elijah.’
“Absolutely disgusting, disgusting. And that could have been prevented. A lot of this, according to what happened today and what I heard, happened after the fact, that he went to the doctors and bruising was seen,” said Chasse.
Prosecutors also said that Elijah weighed 32 pounds at his last and only doctor’s visit with his mother, and weighed 19 pounds when his body was found in the state park.
“I’m just hoping she gets the absolute maximum. That’s what Elijah deserves,” added Morrison.
Dauphinais is expected to be sentenced on Oct. 25.
She could face between 58 years to life in prison.
This is a developing story. Check back for updates as more information becomes available.
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