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The Honolulu Advertiser
Posted on: Monday, June 15, 2009

Lawyer says police rushed to bring charges against Westbrook


Advertiser Staff

Hawaii news photo - The Honolulu Advertiser

Lawyer Eric Seitz today accused police of rushing criminal charges against Natalee Westbrook, who is accused of murdering her 7-week-old nephew.

RICHARD AMBO | The Honolulu Advertiser

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The lawyer for a woman charged with murdering her 7-week-old nephew lashed out at police this morning, accusing them of “mishandling” the case and rushing criminal charges against his client.

The comments came from Eric Seitz, who represents Natalee K. Westbrook, 26, charged last week with second-degree murder in the death of Maika Conrad K. Lawelawe-Westbrook.
Westrook appeared briefly before District Judge David Woo to the hear the charge lodged against her. A preliminary hearing in the case was set for July 15.
Seitz said the baby was born with pre-existing medical problems which may have been a factor in his death.
“We haven’t even seen an autopsy,” he said in comments delivered on the sidewalk outside District Court in downtown Honolulu.
Westbrook was babysitting the boy, the son of her sister, as well as Westbrook’s own infant on May 9.
According to court records, Westbrook told police that she left Maika alone for two or three minutes for a quick trip to the bathroom and when she returned found him unresponsive and face-down on the floor. He died the next day.
Doctors found a large bruise on the left side of the baby's head, according to a police affidavit. They also found internal bleeding in his skull and semi-detached retinas, signs of shaken baby syndrome, according to police.
The Honolulu Medical Examiner's office determined that Maika's death was from abusive head trauma and that the manner of death was homicide.
The baby “had a blood clot in his head when he was born,” Seitz said.
“We don’t know what happened,” he said.
The state Child Protective Services “has not concluded that she (Westbrook) was an abusive caretaker, “ Seitz continued.
He called the case a “tragedy” and the way it has been handled by police “a travesty.”
Westbrook’s family members support her and do not believe she has done anything wrong, Seitz said.
“Of all the children in the family, she is the most caring, the most supportive, the most responsible,” he said.
Westbrook is free on $150,000 bail.
The combative Seitz demanded that Woo excuse himself from the case after the judge refused to move the initial hearing ahead on the crowded District Court calendar.
Woo believed that Seitz was disputing the right of news cameras to be in the court hearing and wanted to hear more arguments on that issue later in the morning.
When Seitz withdrew his objections to cameras, Woo expedited the hearing and then allowed Westbrook to be escorted by Deputy Sheriffs out a rear entrance of the courthouse, away from more reporting crews waiting for her in the hallway outside the courtroom.