The Disturbing Child Abuse

2020-12-13 12:49:35 Written by Sila Habib

A toddler was murdered after potty training punishment.

 

James “JJ” Sieger Jr. was working on being potty trained when he accidentally pooped in his diaper. This irritated his mother, Jasmine Bridgeman, and caused her to rub his droppings on the little boy’s face.

Jasmine’s boyfriend, Joshua Schoenenberger, came into the room and grabbed the boy up by his abdomen, and began crying at him while pushed on his stomach. The boy used the bathroom on himself too. Joshua dropped him from 6 feet off of the floor onto the tile in the washroom. He then stood on their boy’s abdomen because of “how he deals with the house.” 

 

JJ was hurried to the hospital unresponsive by Jasmine and Joshua, and both were caught on the spot. JJ had internal bleeding and scrapes on his groin, arms, and legs. As the cruel couple was being toted off to prison, the boy’s biological dad, James Sieger Snr, left everything and arrived at the hospital to be by his son’s side. He told that that horrible day was “the terrible and most hard day” of his life. 

The Siegers claim Bridgeman, who is still legally wife of James Sieger Snr, carried JJ and ran off about four months before JJ’s murder. They claim to have only recently found where the kid was and had been struggling on getting him back.

“We moved into the ICU, and we were allowed to hold JJ's hand. We were there with him. We sang 'Twinkle, Twinkle Little Star' to him, that was his special song. He was just understanding how to sing that. James held his beautiful hand. I kept my hand on JJ's heart, and we felt him take his last breath and felt his heartbeat for the last time as he left this world and moved on to be with his Heavenly Father," said Nicole Sieger, JJ's aunt.

Jasmine was sentenced to spend 1 to 15 years in jail. 

Joshua was sentenced to spend life in jail without parole.

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Wrightsville Fire of 1959. On March 5, 1959, twenty-one African-American boys burned to death inside a dormitory at an Arkansas reform school in Wrightsville (Pulaski County). ... The event brought attention to this largely forgotten institution that was operating during the Jim Crow era in Arkansas. watch a informative Video about this case.       Watch Video