Macomb County, Michigan – A Michigan babysitter has been convicted of murder for the brutal killing of a toddler she was entrusted to care for, in a case that has shocked the community and reignited conversations about child safety, wrongful death lawsuits, and criminal accountability.
A jury in Macomb County on Thursday found 24-year-old Kimora Launmei Hodges guilty of murder in the 2022 death of 23-month-old Kyrie Starks, according to a report from Detroit NBC affiliate WDIV.
Authorities say Hodges fatally injured the boy by throwing him against a wall, causing severe blunt force trauma to his head. The incident occurred while she was babysitting the child at her home in the 30000 block of Little Mack Avenue in Roseville, Michigan.
As Law&Crime previously reported, Roseville police were called to a local hospital on June 22, 2022, after medical staff reported a young boy had been admitted with life-threatening head trauma.
The victim’s mother had rushed to Hodges’ home after receiving a disturbing call from her neighbor-turned-babysitter. Hodges allegedly told her the child “did not look normal.”
“Once I made it there my baby was on the ground having seizure, after seizure, after seizure,” the devastated mother told Detroit Fox affiliate WJBK.
Initially, Hodges claimed the boy was suffering from an allergic reaction after “eating soap.” The victim’s mother even believed the explanation at first—until doctors revealed the extent of the injuries.
“I believed her until the doctors told me otherwise because I trusted her. I feel so betrayed ’cause I would’ve done anything for [Hodges] & her daughter,” she wrote on a GoFundMe page.
Court documents show the boy arrived at the hospital around 2 a.m. on June 14, 2022.
“He had blunt force trauma to the head and he was bleeding out his ears and had to have immediate brain surgery,” the grieving mother told WJBK. “All I know is she threw my son into the wall and shook him up pretty bad and they said that’s just a bit of what she did to him.”
Police arrested Hodges just hours later. During questioning, she admitted to physically abusing the child but insisted she had not intentionally taken her anger out on him.
“That’s not what was supposed to happen,” she told detectives. “Maybe I hit him too hard, but I didn’t take my anger out on him.”
Hodges was initially charged with first-degree child abuse, but the charges were upgraded to murder after Kyrie succumbed to his injuries on June 15, 2022.
She now faces up to life in prison when sentenced on October 2, according to the Detroit News. Legal experts say she could also face potential civil lawsuits for wrongful death, in addition to criminal penalties.
This case serves as a sobering reminder of the dangers of child abuse and the importance of vetting caregivers. It also raises legal discussions surrounding personal injury law, criminal negligence, and brain injury compensation claims in cases involving minors.