Stevens Found Guilty Of Son’s Murder
STEVENS
By CASEY KNAUPP
Staff Writer
Catherine Alana Stevens pleaded guilty Friday to murdering her 2-year-old son.
Staff Writer
Catherine Alana Stevens pleaded guilty Friday to murdering her 2-year-old son.
The 38-year-old woman was initially indicted for capital murder, but entered into a plea agreement for a life sentence for strangling her son William to death on July 8. She admitted her guilt two days before Mother's Day and will be eligible for parole after serving 30 years.
Smith County District Attorney Matt Bingham requested that her capital murder indictment be dismissed because of the plea agreement and 7th District Judge Kerry Russell granted it after he sentenced the defendant.
"We are very pleased with the resolution to this case through the hard work of the Tyler Police Department and First Assistant District Attorney April Sikes," Bingham said. "We were able to show that in fact (Mrs. Stevens) was not insane."
Defense attorneys Brett Harrison and Tonda Curry had earlier filed a notice of intent to raise the insanity defense in her capital murder trial but withdrew the motion during the hearing. They said Mrs. Stevens was examined Friday by a doctor who found her competent to proceed with the guilty plea.
"In this case, this mother who killed her child will not be going to a state hospital," Bingham said. "She will be going to the penitentiary for life and will not be eligible for parole for 30 years, ensuring that she spends virtually the rest of her life in the penitentiary without a trial and having waived all rights to appeal."
Bingham said there was no question that Mrs. Stevens had a lengthy history of mental illness, but it did not equate to legal insanity.
"Our (mental health) experts found on the night in question that she knew her conduct was wrong," he said.
Harrison said the case was a terrible tragedy. He said all of the mental health experts, hired by the state and defense, agreed she had a long history of severe mental disease; but, under Texas law, that alone is not sufficient to establish the insanity defense. Because of that, Mrs. Stevens chose to plead guilty.
"This was fully her decision and we support her decision," Harrison said.
Under Texas law, people are found legally insane if, at the time of an offense, they did not know their conduct was wrong because of some mental illness or defect.
Mrs. Stevens, clad in a tan jail jumpsuit and shackles, told the judge that over the last five years she had been confined several times in the Rusk State Hospital, a couple of times at the Behavioral Health Center and once at a Dallas hospital. She said she was treated for depression with psychosis.
Harrison said she was found competent to stand trial by several doctors early on in the case, but was examined again Friday before the guilty plea.
The child's father, Mickey Stevens, reportedly slept in an adjoining room during the attack on William at the family's home, at 2513 Memory Lane.
When the father awoke and went to look for his wife, he found Mrs. Stevens standing over the child, who was on the floor.
The man took his son, who was not breathing, to the couch and called 911, an affidavit stated.
Mrs. Stevens was not the first woman to raise the insanity defense in her capital murder case in Smith County.
In 2004, Deanna Laney was found not guilty by reason of insanity by a Smith County jury after she stoned two of her young sons to death and critically injured her toddler in 2003.
After Ms. Laney was acquitted, 114th District Judge Cynthia Stevens Kent ordered her to be placed in a maximum-security inpatient treatment facility. Since then, Judge Kent has presided over closed-door civil commitment hearings each year and determined that Ms. Laney should remain at an inpatient facility.






