By Mandy Locke, Staff Writer
SMITHFIELD - A judge will allow Lynn Paddock's oldest children to tell a jury that they endured abuse at her hand.
Johnston County Assistant District Attorney Paul Jackson said Paddock murdered 4-year-old Sean through a pattern of torture unleashed on her children for years.
Paddock's oldest children spent Monday and today telling a judge how Lynn Paddock beat and tormented her children for years. Such evidence is not typically allowed at trial unless a judge agrees to allow it.
Paddock played on the children's worst fears and vulnerabilities to punish them, testified one of her adopted children, Tami Paddock.
Now 21, Tami Paddock said that shortly after she was adopted in 1996, she confided in her new mother that she had been molested by a man who climbed into her bedroom through an open window. Lynn Paddock then ordered her to sleep beneath an open bedroom window at night, she said.
"Schooling was a privilege, talking was a privilege, even eating was a privilege," Tami Paddock said. "When you got in trouble, that stuff was taken away."
Tami Paddock was one of six children adopted by Lynn Paddock and her then husband, Johnny Paddock. Lynn Paddock is accused of suffocating one of the children, Sean, when he was 4 years old by wrapping him tightly in blankets.
Under cross-examination, Tami Paddock said her father knew about some of the abuse. Johnny Paddock has not been charged in the case. He told reporters Monday that he was unaware of what was happening at home while he was at work.
Tami's brother Ray testified this morning that Lynn Paddock forced him to jog in place for two hours and beat him with a metal fence rod when he slowed down. Ray, 17, said he developed a blood clot after she threw a hammer at his shoulder while he helped build a fence to keep goats.
Lynn Paddock's rage grew when Sean and two other children came to live with the family in 2005 at a remote farmhouse outside Smithfield, he testified.
She would duct-tape the mouths of the youngest children to keep them from talking to one another, and she often cursed at them while she beat them, he said.
"She'd just curse at us to make us feel we weren't worth anything," Ray said. "She very rarely told us she loved us. She told us nobody would ever take us if we left there."
A detective recounted Lynn Paddock's version of events this afternoon as defense lawyers argued her statements ought to be suppressed for trial.
Detective James Gerrell with the Johnston County Sheriff's Office interviewed Paddock the night Sean suffocated to death.
Paddock tearfully explained how she'd wrapped 4-year-old Sean several nights in the week leading up to his death.
"She wrapped him tight," Gerrell testified. "Saturday night, she wrapped him even tighter. She figured the tighter she did it, the less [he would] move."
Gerrell said that, according to Paddock, Sean resisted the binding and bucked his head back and forth, wailing for hours until he fell asleep. The morning he died, Paddock found Sean wide-eyed in bed, staring blankly ahead. She ordered her oldest child to call for an ambulance as she unwrapped Sean from the blankets.