Vegan couple's life sentence holds in baby's death
ATLANTA (AP) - An Atlanta vegan couple whose malnourished 6-week-old son starved to death after they fed him a too-limited diet will have to serve their life sentences for murder...

ATLANTA (AP) â An Atlanta vegan couple whose malnourished 6-week-old son starved to death after they fed him a too-limited diet of soy milk and apple juice will have to serve their life sentences for murder, Georgiaâs top court ruled on Monday.
The Georgia Supreme Courtâs unanimous decision rejected appeals by Jade Sanders and Lamont Thomas.
The two first-time parents in their 20s at the time lived in Atlantaâs Buckhead neighborhood. They rushed their infant, Crown Shakur, to the hospital in April 2004 after he began to have trouble breathing. Doctors who couldnât resuscitate him determined he died because of extreme malnourishment or starvation.
Police searching the coupleâs apartment found a soy milk bottle, an apple juice bottle and a rancid-smelling baby bottle caked with debris.
At the 2007 trial, prosecutors said the soy milk cartons in their apartment stated that it wasnât to be used as a substitute for baby formula. They also contended that the couple intentionally neglected their child and refused to take him to the doctor even as his body wasted away. He was just 3.5 pounds when he died, about as much as a baby weighs at 7 months into a normal pregnancy.
A jury convicted them of malice murder, felony murder, involuntary manslaughter and cruelty to children.
âNo matter how many times they want to say, âWeâre vegans, weâre vegetarians,â thatâs not the issue in this case,â prosecutor Chuck Boring said during the trial. âThe child died because he was not fed. Period.â
Defense attorneys countered that the parents did the best they could while adhering to the lifestyle of vegans, who typically use no animal products. They said Sanders and Thomas did not realize the baby was in danger until they rushed his emaciated body to the hospital.
âI loved my son â and I did not starve him,â Jade Sanders said at her May 2007 sentencing hearing.
In her appeal, Sandersâ attorney argued the evidence wasnât strong enough to support the verdict. And Thomasâ lawyer claimed his trial attorney was ineffective because he failed to call an expert to support his theory that his sonâs death was linked to cystic fibrosis and not starvation.
But the opinion, which was written by Presiding Justice George Carley, rejected both arguments. The evidence, the justices concluded, was sufficient to find both parents were âguilty of the crimes for which they were convicted.â
Copyright 2011 The Associated Press.
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