At 4 years old, Demond Reed woke up early every morning, smiling, full of energy, ready to eat breakfast and eager to turn every TV in the house on to his beloved "SpongeBob SquarePants."
He liked Chicken McNuggets from McDonald's, chocolate milk, playing with his cousins and riding in the car with his grandpa Tony Ishmon from Chicago to Minneapolis.
"He was a little fun, energetic kid that just wanted to be loved," Ishmon said in his victim-impact statement, standing yards from the table where Demond's killer, his aunt Carla Poole, sat with her lawyer Rick Trachy.
On Friday, Ishmon came to Hennepin County District Court in search of an explanation why "his traveling buddy" died. His anguished voice rose as he concluded his comments.
"The only thing I want to know is, Why did she do it?" he said, thumping his hand on the rostrum for each of the final five words before walking out of the courtroom and calling Poole an epithet.
But family members who gathered for Poole's sentencing got no answer to that question.
There was no suspense about Poole's prison term. She agreed to a 40-year sentence as part of her plea deal last month. She pleaded guilty to second-degree unintentional murder in Demond's brutal death in Minneapolis earlier this year.
Poole admitted killing Demond, who weighed only 29 pounds, when he was in her care while his dad was serving a brief stint in the workhouse. She had two of her own children hold Demond as she beat him. Afterward she did not summon help for him and eventually bagged and hid his body. When Poole called police, she told them Demond had been taken by an acquaintance. Eventually, her story unraveled when one of her children told police what had happened. Police found Demond's bruised and bitten body in a duffel bag in the back of a closet.