Thursday, January 04, 2024

Five years ago: Jalen Vaden pleads guilty to felony child abuse, sentenced to 22 years, murder charge dropped

(Five years ago yesterday, Jalen Vaden, 23, Carl Junction, pleaded guilty to child abuse in connection with the death of 3-year-old Jayda Kyle. The following is the Turner Report coverage of the plea hearing and sentencing, followed by a statement released by Vaden through his attorney shortly after the hearing)

Jalen Vaden pleaded guilty to felony child abuse resulting in the death of three-year-old Jayda Kyle this afternoon in Jasper County Circuit Court and was sentenced to 22 years in prison.

The plea came as a result of an agreement with the Jasper County Prosecuting Attorney's office in which the second degree murder charge against Vaden was dropped.

Because of the nature of the crime, Vaden, 23, will be required to serve at least 85 percent of the time before he becomes eligible for parole. He will not be eligible for probation at any time.








Vaden, wearing a Jasper County Jail orange jumpsuit and shackled, answered a series of questions from Greene County Circuit Court Judge Michael Cordonnier on whether he understood every aspect of the plea and the rights he is giving up by entering it in a soft monotone, replying "Yes, sir," to each of the questions.

"Do you realize if you plead guilty your right to a trial will be lost forever?" Cordonnier asked.

(The statement released by Jalen Vaden and his attorney after the plea hearing can be found at this link.)

"Yes sir."

Jasper County Prosecuting Attorney Theresa Kenney detailed the evidence that would have been presented if Vaden had gone to trial.

The familiar details from the original probable cause statement were recounted, but Kenney also added others which explained why investigators zeroed in on Vaden rather than the other adult who was in the home at 405 Meadow Lake Drive in Carl Junction the night of November 27, 2017, Jayda's mother, Devyn Kyle.

When Carl Junction Police Department officers arrived, emergency medical personnel were already working on Jayda, Kenney said.








Vaden had blood on his shirt and there was blood on the floor in the child's room as well as on the bed.

After it was determined that Jayda Kyle's death, which occurred December 1 after she had been airlifted to Children's Mercy Hospital in Kansas City, did not come as a result of any medical condition, but rather from abuse, investigators questioned Vaden and Kyle separately after advising them of their Miranda rights.

Kenney said that in the videotaped interview, Vaden told officers he did not intend to hurt Jayda, but "he just snapped."

Vaden demonstrated on a doll what he had done to the child, including throwing her on the floor and causing her to hit her head, Kenney said, and then officers left the room as Vaden wrote on a piece of paper a description of the exact locations in the child's room where the incidents of abuse had taken place.

Vaden's descriptions of what he had done to Jayda and where he had done it matched up completely with the physical evidence from the crime scene and the medical evidence, Kenney said.

As the prosecuting attorney described Vaden's actions, he stared straight ahead not showing any emotion.



Jasper County Juvenile office documents dated November 30, 2017 revealed that Jayda Kyle was likely already brain dead when she arrived at Children's Mercy Hospital, but she was not stable enough for doctors to do the test. The doctors were able to determine that she appeared to have no brain activity:

"Initially, the ED doctor stated he believed the child had suffered an aneurysm. Jayda was then seen by a neurosurgeon with the SCAN team who reported the amount of brain bleed and retinal damage is non-natural causes."







The tests showed that Jayda had a severely torn retina. The doctors determined that the child would be blind if by some miracle if she survived.

Medical personnel were in and out of Jayda's room Nov. 29 as she kept coding, according to the report. She was officially pronounced dead December 1.

Vaden insisted in a five-page letter sent from the Jasper County Jail to Jayda Kyle's father, Mackenzie Kyle, in January 2018 that he did not commit the murder..

"I've prayed for you everyday since I got to this hell hole," Vaden said. "I pray that you know I didn't do this to (Jayda)."

Vaden wrote about how being with Mac Kyle's children and his own son had turned him into a better person.








"They were teaching me way more than I thought I was teaching them. They softened my heart and showed me what real love is."

Vaden added, "Those babies were my life and I have you to thank for that."

During the questioning form Judge Cordonnier, Vaden, under oath, acknowledged that he had done everything the prosecuting attorney said he did.

Kenney said the family of Jayda Kyle, some of whom were in the courtroom, were fully informed about the plea agreement.

Cordonnier asked if family members had any impact statements. Kenney said they did not wish to make any statements.

***
(From January 3, 2019)

The following statement was issued by Jalen Vaden's attorney Tracey Martin, on behalf of her client, following today's plea hearing in which Vaden pleaded guilty and was sentenced to 22 years in prison for felony child abuse resulting in a death.

Jalen has authorized me to make a statement on his behalf following his guilty plea.

Jalen continues to assert that his "confession" was not accurate or truthful.

However, he does take responsibility for a reckless, tragic accident that resulted in the death of a beautiful child. He feels extreme guilt and remorse for all of the families and individuals that continue to grieve for that precious little girl.








It has taken a lot of time to look at every piece of evidence and follow every lead. After a thorough review of the evidence, and the additional medical evidence only released last month, it became clear that Jayda's death was the result of reckless action.

Jalen had no intent to hurt or injure Jayda and unfortunately, that does not change the outcome.

He wants to personally apologize to both the Kyle and McPherson families for their loss. He also is disgusted by how the families have been treated on social  media, and asks that people allow the families to process their loss without any further bullying or mistreatment on social media or otherwise.

While this is certainly not the outcome many hoped for, we promised to thoroughly review every aspect of this case to confirm that we found the truth.

While there may be unanswered questions, we have done all we can do to find and stand on the truth. Jalen hopes that taking responsibility will allow the families and the community to move toward healing.

Unfortunately, this case resulted in a number of hurtful, inaccurate facts being shared. We hope this resolution will end the speculation and gossip that has hurt so many.








Jalen hopes the three families can heal and work together in spite of him, so that the two young boys can be reunited as brothers. They lost their sister and extended family members.

There has been enough heartbreak.

Jalen believes it is time to allow these families to heal, hopefully together, for the boys.

1 comment:

  1. Anonymous6:08 AM

    This Low Life Sick Bastard - Jalen Vaden, 23, will someday get out of Jail - While this 3-year-old Child - Jayda Kyle - will never have that opportunity to Celebrate Life.

    I hope he never makes it out of the Jail System - -

    He Killed this Child - - Yet only receives 22-Years - - What kind of Justice System do we have - Pathetic Liberal Judges, Pathetic Liberal Prosecuting Attorneys, and Pathetic Liberal Jurors - Who Feel Sorry for this Piece of Crap.

    When are we going to Stand Up to these Criminals, Pedophiles, Drug Users, Alcoholic - DUI DWI's, Domestic Abuse Individuals and Lock them up and throw away the keys.

    Stop Feeling Sorry for the Criminals and Feel Sorry for their Victims.

    ReplyDelete