KY - Meghan Bratcher, 32; *Arrest* 4 mo. old assaulted; Owensboro; 27 Nov 2019

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  • #1
According to the Owensboro Police Department, a 4-month-old baby was in the hospital with “serious physical injuries.” On Sunday, police were called to the hospital to investigate a report of possible child abuse.

OPD says they arrested Meghan Bratcher, 32-years-old, of Owensboro, for 1st Degree Assault on Wednesday.

The news release says her arrest came after their investigation determined Bratcher’s intentional actions caused the baby to suffer these serious injuries.
upload_2019-12-10_11-12-33.jpeg


According the the jail website, her bond is $200,000 cash.
OPD: Woman arrested after baby hospitalized with ‘serious physical injuries’
 
  • #2
Warning: Graphic

“The child is no better, no worse,” Alsip said under oath on Friday.

According to doctors Alsip has spoken with, the infant had sustained various skull fractures as a result of alleged abuse, as well as multiple broken ribs. Bratcher initially told OPD that she’d been carrying the child into her kitchen in the days leading up to Sunday, and that she’d gotten dizzy and passed out, dropping the child on the floor in the process.

That story didn’t ring true for specialists at the hospital who told Alsip that the baby’s injuries exemplified severe abuse on multiple occasions. Doctors told Alsip that the earliest of the detected injuries — the broken ribs — happened to the baby at 10 days old.

Alsip couldn’t say how many skull fractures had been suffered by the child, but did say doctors have detected a scarce amount of brain activity in the baby since being put on life support. The low brain activity is a sign of severe brain damage, they said.

OPD interviewed Bratcher, her husband and surrounding neighbors about the incident, but only one arrest has been made at this point.

Bratcher’s story about the child’s injuries changed as detectives continued to press her for information, and during her second interview she admitted to law enforcement that she’d physically abused her child on multiple occasions.

Bratcher admitted to hitting her child with her fists and hands, but told Alsip she couldn’t remember which days those incidents had occurred. Bratcher admitted that the abusive incidents could have resulted in the child’s broken ribs.

Even more, Bratcher admitted to vigorously shaking her child and slamming the baby’s head against a closet door in her home. Alsip didn’t mention the number of times Bratcher admitted to committing these acts of violence.

Bratcher told Alsip during interviews that, two days before bringing her child to the emergency room, a bout of night terrors had caused her to kick the baby off her bed and onto the floor. When Bratcher checked on the infant, he wasn’t breathing. Bratcher told Alsip she performed CPR until the child regained consciousness.

Bratcher’s child became feverish Friday night, she said, but she still didn’t take him to the emergency room. On Sunday evening, one of the child’s eyes began to droop, which prompted Bratcher and her husband to take the child to the hospital.

After being given these descriptions, Burlew spoke of the difficulty it takes to break an infant’s ribs, saying the undeveloped bones require one to exert great force in fracturing them.

“This is very unfortunate — for the baby,” he told Bratcher, who’d begun crying as she stood before him in a jail uniform and handcuffs.

Bratcher’s attorney asked that her client be allowed to leave jail on an unsecured bond and go home, with an inability to leave the county. Burlew denied the attorney’s request and kept Bratcher’s bond the same at $200,00.

Bratcher also has a 16-month-old son, Alsip said, but didn’t reveal whether or not this child had been subjected to the same physical abuse. The child is currently in the state’s custody, he said.

Alsip said he had not been informed of the child’s life expectancy.
Owensboro mother charged with assault admits to physically abusing 4-month-old baby - The Owensboro Times
 
  • #3
Meghan Bratcher, where law enforcement said she took her four-month-old child to the emergency room following months of alleged physical abuse, CASA (Court Appointed Special Advocates) of Ohio Valley Executive Director Rosemary Conder said it’s time for the community to — not just talk about the event — but take action.

Conder and CASA Program Coordinator Ashley Evans-Smith said this occurrence of child abuse has rocked Daviess County, and though both CASA staff members deal with abuse and neglect against children on a daily basis, the first-degree assault Bratcher inflicted on her child was more severe than most, they said.

Both Evans-Smith and Conder said they don’t believe abusive parents are purely evil people — almost always, there’s a backstory that leads a parent to physically, mentally or emotionally abuse their child.

“She got here somehow,” Evans-Smith said. “This didn’t just happen out of nowhere.”

Conder and Evans-Smith said it’s ineffective for society to judge Bratcher and her family without taking into account the multitude of different circumstances that could have led her to be a totally different mother than what’s expected.

“It’s really ineffective to judge that family against my family because they haven’t had the same set of circumstances I’ve had,” Evans-Smith. “The anger people feel about this situation is completely justified, but if I choose to only view them through the lens of my family, then I’m really missing an opportunity to create change, and think about this, and serve the community.”

Evans-Smith said something as small as offering to help a parent in the check-out line by consoling a screaming child or helping them unload groceries can greatly decrease the oftentimes unseen stress levels that build up in new and veteran parents alike. A gesture like that could be the difference between a parent who blows up at their child later, or a parent who walks away feeling gratitude for someone else’s act of kindness.

As Conder said, it takes a village to create change and prevent tragedies like this one from occurring again.
CASA implores community to take action in aftermath of child abuse incident - The Owensboro Times
 
  • #4
JAN 14, 2020
Grand jury returns indictments in stabbing, assaults
[...]

The grand jury also indicted Meghan J. Bratcher, 32, of the 1200 block of Venable Way with first-degree assault for an assault on a 4-month-old.

The incident was reported on Nov. 24 by staff at Owensboro Health Regional Hospital, reports say. Detectives determined Bratcher shook the infant and struck its head against a door, court records say.

[...]
 
  • #5
Well, IMO, we can expect a murder charge against mommie dearest any day now -- that little gift will probably not be on life support much longer.
Hoping that the little one is no longer aware of pain, fear and hunger. Also hoping that her mother is very much aware of those same horrors. SMH.
Just dammit.
 
  • #6
So this happened Dec 10th and the baby is still alive? But on life support? I read he/she had little brain function.... ugh! Horrific :(
 
  • #7
Is the baby still in the hospital, and what is his current condition, does anyone know?

Was anyone else present at the time the baby “fell”

Broken ribs, skull fractures .... babies bodies are very pliant and would have to be dropped hard on the head for a skull fracture, but this implies multiple fractures. Most likely not the result of a fall, so from what?

@Steveonmeg729 ... please get verified, or you will not be allowed to give your info here without a media link.

Obviously you love your wife and believe in her, but the baby deserves justice if abuse was involved by anyone (do you believe the hospital personnel did something to harm the child? If so, how could that have happened?)
 
  • #8
Posts by a member who is not a VI have been removed but will be reinstated when VI status has been approved.

Post explaining the process for insiders to become verified can be found here.
 

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