PDA

View Full Version : Bakersfield dad accused of attacking child


Faith
05-17-2009, 01:54 PM
A Bakersfield father is accused of biting out one of the eyes of his small child and similarly mutilating the other eye, leaving the child blind.

After attacking the child, 34-year-old Angel Vidal Mendoza Sr. quickly left his apartment in a wheelchair, entered a backyard of a nearby vacant home and attacked his own legs with an ax, severely injuring himself, Bakersfield police reported.

The child, 4-year-old Angelo Mendoza Jr., later told police, "My daddy ate my eyes."

Doctors at Mercy Hospital said it is unknown whether the child will regain vision in his right eye.

Child Protective Services cannot discuss the case, CPS program director Brian Parnell said. But in cases of serious abuse, the child is taken into protective custody, he said.

Some foster homes have specialized medical training, but more such people are needed, he said.

The boy's mother, Desirae Marie Bermudez, 23, was not present during the incident. There is a $15,000 warrant for her arrest for failing to complete a drug treatment program in late 2008, court documents say.

A search warrant report said the father "was displaying symptoms of being under the influence of PCP."

Both he and Bermudez were charged with being under the influence of PCP in a 2006 criminal case. Both pleaded no contest to child endangerment charges in that case, records say.

So why was the boy still living with the father?

CPS officials say there has to pretty much be serious physical abuse -- major bruises or broken bones -- before a child is taken away from his parents automatically.

In cases where parents are using drugs, CPS will definitely check on the child, Parnell said. But they won't necessarily remove the child. That all depends on the extent of the drug abuse or the availability of other care -- relatives or neighbors -- for the children, he said.

The incident happened in the early evening of April 28 at the apartment the father and son share at 422 Ohio Drive near Terrace Way and Madison Street in southeast Bakersfield.

Police and search warrant reports say:

On the morning of April 28, Mendoza asked neighbor Elizabeth Rodriguez, 36, for a ride to a work-related appointment later in the day.

At 6 p.m., she sent her 12-year-old son to get Mendoza. The boy said Mendoza opened his door slightly and looked nervous, but didn't let him in. Mendoza said he would be right out.

But a few minutes later, Rodriguez saw Mendoza rolling his wheelchair quickly away.

The 12-year-old boy and another neighbor went to Mendoza's apartment and discovered the child on the floor.

Meanwhile, witnesses told police a man was yelling and screaming in a wheelchair from the backyard and hitting his legs with an ax.

Mendoza, who remains in custody in lieu of $1 million bail, is charged with mayhem, torture, child cruelty and inflicting an injury to a child.

He's scheduled for a May 20 hearing.

His criminal history dates back to 1998 and includes convictions for drugs, battery, check forgery and a misdemeanor child endangerment.

http://www.bakersfield.com/news/local/x339729128/Bakersfield-dad-accused-of-biting-out-sons-eye

Faith
05-17-2009, 01:57 PM
It's things like this that make me wanna murder some people. It was very sad to read this in the morning news.

Big C
05-17-2009, 02:05 PM
Give him the gas chamber!

Hollow
05-17-2009, 02:31 PM
The child, 4-year-old Angelo Mendoza Jr., later told police, "My daddy ate my eyes."
talk about slaughtered innocence. ohno: that man doesn't stand a chance at life.

catlover79
05-17-2009, 02:32 PM
Give him the gas chamber!
No, put the electric chair INSIDE the gas chamber!! :mad: :mad: :mad:

ZeldaGilroy
05-17-2009, 06:40 PM
This story makes me sick. That poor little boy is certainly in my prayers.

dawsongirl
05-17-2009, 10:16 PM
CPS officials say there has to pretty much be serious physical abuse -- major bruises or broken bones -- before a child is taken away from his parents automatically.

In cases where parents are using drugs, CPS will definitely check on the child, Parnell said. But they won't necessarily remove the child. That all depends on the extent of the drug abuse or the availability of other care -- relatives or neighbors -- for the children, he said.



That is so ****ed up wrong. OMG I hate this world.

dawsongirl
05-17-2009, 10:18 PM
Don't give him a trial...just throw him to the wolves and have them eat his eyes out.

PZelda
05-17-2009, 10:26 PM
Holy ****, that is one messed up guy. The mother sounds like a real winner herself. How'd she make it to 23 with such a severe lack of oxygen to her brain?? :crazy:

Marvo301
05-17-2009, 10:40 PM
There is obviuously something very wrong with the system when these people can have prior for convictions for drugs, battery, and child endangerment and the authorities didn't deem it necessary to remove this child from the home. What does it take before the child's safety becomes an issue? When did the criminals rights become more important than those of the victim. It makes me sick!!!!!puke: :mad:

catlover79
05-18-2009, 08:57 AM
^ Marv, I couldn't have put it better myself.

robyrob
05-18-2009, 09:04 AM
that whole story is just crazy, that poor kid :(


- i don't understand the lure of angeldust/PCP at all; I imagine some skeezy-looking drug dealer comes up to you and says, "Hey, I've got this highly addictive stuff that will make you think you can fly, mutilate yourself and want to eat your children's eyeballs ...wanna try it?"

MickeyMac
05-18-2009, 01:01 PM
Skip the trial, take this f**ker straigh to the electric chair.

Chocoholic
05-18-2009, 04:56 PM
Give this sicko the death penalty! He does not deserve to live for another second. I'm tired of these monsters being allowed to have children! :(

dawsongirl
05-18-2009, 07:44 PM
I watched a news blurb of this story and the Rodriguez guy...not the 12 year old though...said he saw the guy hacking at himself with the ax but didn't know or realize that he did all that to his child. He said had he known, he'd have let him chop his legs of instead of intervening.

http://www.kcci.com/video/19492009/index.html

Faith
05-22-2009, 01:24 PM
ost parents would lovingly place a favorite stuffed animal in their baby's crib.

But Angelo Mendoza may have stashed his drug supply where his infant son slept, according to police reports examined Thursday.

The incident came in 2006 when police were at the child's home and found a plastic pill bottled wrapped up with then baby Angelo Mendoza Jr. Inside the bottle was possible drug residue.

Several weeks ago, Angelo's father, Angel Mendoza, allegedly attacked the boy and bit out one of his eyes and damaged the other. Angelo is now blind.

The revelation raises the question: Why did Mendoza ever get back custody of his son?

Both Mendoza and the mother, Desirae Bermudez, were arrested on charges of being under the influence of PCP and child endangerment in the 2006 incident.

As the parents were driven to jail, baby Angelo was taken to the Jamison Center in the custody of Child Protective Services.

How long he stayed in protective custody is unknown, but Mendoza's brother said Thursday he was unaware that the child was ever taken away.

The brother, Jesse Rosas, 26, is now trying to obtain custody of Angelo.

Could Mendoza have quickly regained custody of a baby under those circumstances?

CPS program director Brian Parnell said can't talk about a specific case, unless there's a death or near death.

But Parnell said when a child goes to Jamison Center, what happens next can vary. In some cases the child will be placed with a relative. In other cases the parent can end up having to go to court and there could be restrictions before the child can be returned.

At a minimum, CPS would do an assessment before returning an endangered child to a parent, Parnell said. That could include drug testing, anger management or parenting classes before a child is returned, he said.

In Mendoza's 2006 criminal case, he got no jail time, three years probation and an order to attend a year-long parenting class, which he successfully completed. He pleaded no contest to misdemeanor child endangerment.

Now the 34-year-old father is accused of mayhem, torture and child cruelty. He's scheduled to be in court today for a status hearing.

In recent years, several parents have praised Mendoza's relationship with his son -- one noting that Mendoza won a parent participation award an an Oildale Head Start School.

But new revelations describe Mendoza as harsh, "wild eyed" and drugged in the week before the attack.

Bermudez told KBAK that she had gone to Mendoza's home hours before the attack to deliver a pizza. Her son was begging to go home with her, she said.

She said heard the boy cry, "Mommy, mommy, I want to go with you. I'm scared."

Bermudez, herself wanted on a $15,000 warrant for failing to complete a drug treatment class in the 2006 case, said she decided to leave then.

Another man, Harvey Clowers, who has played wheelchair basketball with Mendoza, told KBAK that recently Mendoza "had a wild look in his eyes" and appeared to be under the influence of something.

Mendoza, who has been wheelchair bound for four years after he was paralyzed in a stabbing, showed symptoms of PCP use the day he attacked his son, police reported.

Right after the attack, Mendoza hacked his own legs with an ax.

While there's been virtually no sympathy for his injuries, there's been global sympathy for his little boy.

People want to know how to help the boy.

The uncle, Jesse Rosas, went to the bank Thursday to set up a fund to help the child. He did not return calls later in the day for specifics.

Rosas said he is seeking custody because Angelo gets along well with his wife and their own children -- a boy, 9, and a girl, 3.

Rosas, a homeowner who has worked the last 4 and 1/2 years in the oilfields, said Angelo loved to play on the backyard swing set with his own children or come in and watch a movie with the adults.

Unlike Mendoza. Rosas has no criminal record.

He said he's a graduate of Centennial High School and sent to Taft College for a year and a half. He said is working with Child Protective Services on his application for custody and he fully expects a complete background check and home inspection.

Rosas is a member of Forever Changed, a Christian sport motorcycle group which is also planning fund raising events on Angelo's behalf, including a bike run on June 14. Details are still being worked out, he said.

The uncle said he doesn't have first hand information about how Angelo is doing because CPS is not disclosing that to the family. Hospital officials have confirmed Angelo is no longer at Kern Medical Center, but although CPS says the boy is in protective custody, CPS has not disclosed where.