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Published: May 21, 2008 09:59 AM
Modified: May 21, 2008 02:17 PM
 

Jury selection begins in Paddock trial

SMITHFIELD - Jury selection has begun this afternoon for the trial of Lynn Paddock.

Earlier today, a judge denied the request of Paddock's attorneys to postpone her murder trial in the suffocation of her 4-year-old adopted son.

The lawyers argued that one of the state's experts, a forensic pediatrician, had failed to provide enough data to support her anticipated testimony.

The attorneys had asked for this data before trial, and a judge ordered prosecutors last month to turn over the information. Jack O'Hale, one of the attorneys, said that prosecutors violated open file discovery laws and the judge's order by not providing it.

The pediatrician, Sharon Cooper, is expected to testify that Paddock engaged in sadistic and ritualistic abuse of her seven children. O'Hale argued that Cooper had offered no underlying data, such as medical research, to support her claim.

"I don't know where to go and investigate this," O'Hale said. "I'm not a doctor. She's learned this from somewhere."

But Superior Court Judge Knox Jenkins told O'Hale not to be ridiculous. Jenkins said that O'Hale could cross-examine the expert during the trial.

The judge also said he will hear the defense concerns again before Cooper's testifies.

Jenkins said Tuesday that a jury will be allowed to hear testimony from Paddock's grown children about abuse and humiliation they said said she inflicted. The children often spoke in whispers and stared down at their hands as they testified before Jenkins this week.

Prosecutor Paul Jackson said he plans to use the tales of Paddock's discipline to help secure a conviction in the death of Sean Paddock. Jackson said the abuse amounted to torture, warranting a first-degree murder conviction.

In the courtroom Tuesday, two of Paddock's children told stories of flying hammers, weeks of mandated bed rest, orders to eat vomit and mouths taped shut to keep them from talking to each other. They said Paddock bound Sean and Kayla, another young child, in blankets and forced them to pass the night cordoned off between beds and bookshelves.

These wrappings robbed Sean of air and led to his death in 2006, authorities say.

The children testified that bruises and scratches and broken blood vessels were common and that Paddock's words broke their hearts.

"She'd just curse at us to make us feel we weren't worth anything," said Ray Paddock, whom Lynn Paddock and her husband, Johnny, adopted in 1998. "She very rarely told us she loved us. She told us nobody would ever take us if we left there."

mandy.locke@newsobserver.com or (919) 829-8927

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SEPTEMBER 2001: Sean Ford is born; Wake County Human Services is involved with the infant's family after investigating reports that Sean's father, Dwayne Ford, was abusively disciplining his stepson.

DECEMBER 2002: Sean's day-care teacher called social workers when the infant arrived shivering, his lips blue from the cold. Social workers found no heat in the home; Sean's uncle, Ron Ford Jr., takes in the children but has to give them up six months later when finances become too strained.

MARCH 2003: Sean's father is charged with abusing the boy's siblings. (Dwayne Ford later pleads guilty. He is put on probation and ordered to stay away from the children.)

JUNE 2003: Sean and his siblings move into a Wake County foster home.

SEPTEMBER 2004: After several attempts to reunite the children with their birth mother, social workers give up, and they are legally severed from her care. The children are available for adoption.

OCTOBER 2004: Children's Home Society lines up Johnny and Lynn Paddock, a Johnston County couple who have adopted three other foster children through the private agency, to adopt the Ford children.

JANUARY 2005: Sean and his siblings first visit the Paddocks' farm outside Smithfield. Sean returns from the weekend visit with a bruise on his backside. Lynn Paddock said he fell off a bunk bed. He and his siblings said Paddock whipped him for playing with the family dog.

FEBRUARY 2005: Social workers conclude that Sean tumbled from the bunk bed and the Ford children resume their visits to the Paddock farm.

JULY 2005: The adoption is completed.

FEBRUARY 2006: Sean suffocates after being tightly bundled in blankets. Investigators determine Lynn Paddock has been spanking the children with plastic plumbing supply line. Lynn Paddock is charged with first-degree murder and child abuse. She has been in the Johnston County jail since.

FEBRUARY 2008: Sean’s biological grandparents sue the Paddocks, the state Department of Health and Human Services, Wake County Human Services and private adoption agency Children’s Home Society for the boy’s death. Ron Ford Sr. wants to learn how the agencies failed to protect Sean. The suit is still pending.

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