A Brooklyn Center woman who killed her 10-month-old son had regained custody of him months after he was removed from her care for previous instances of abuse, and multiple positive reports from child protection workers cleared the way for his return, court records show.
Arneshia K. Cunigan, 30, agreed last week to plead guilty in Hennepin County District Court to second-degree manslaughter in connection with the apparent suffocation of Kamari Gholston in April 2021 in her apartment.
The plea agreement calls for a sentence of nearly 3½ years, with the first 2¼ years in prison and the balance on supervised release. Sentencing before Judge Paul Scoggin is scheduled for Aug. 31. Cunigan remains out of custody until then and declined to comment Wednesday.
Kamari's twin sister, Kamaya, was not abused by Cunigan "because she was the defendant's favorite," according to the criminal complaint filed in January, nine months after the boy's death. As recently as last month, the court was allowing Cunigan to see her daughter, who is living with her father, Terrence Gholston, for two hours twice a week while supervised.
Joe Mitchell, a county-appointed attorney for Gholston, declined to comment Wednesday other than to say it's been "a difficult time" for Gholston. "[He] is focused on grieving and providing healing and stability for his family," Mitchell said.
All other attorneys associated with the child protection case, as well as representatives of the county's Child Protection Services, either declined comment or did not respond to messages from the Star Tribune.
Besides the manslaughter case lodged against Cunigan, there also is a felony malicious punishment charge stemming from injuries she allegedly inflicted on Kamari when he was 4 months old. Those injuries led child protection officials to get involved with the family in the first place.
In that case, filed four months after Kamari died, prosecutors say Cunigan brought her son to North Memorial Health in Robbinsdale on Oct. 30, 2020, to have a painful arm checked. An exam revealed a broken elbow, a cut under his lip and "probable fractures" to a rib, ankle, wrist and knee.