Law enforcement personnel are seen at the property of Cheryl Busch, accused of killing her daughter, in this file photo. She and two other homicide suspects were in court today in Hollister.

In an interview with the Free Lance, a UC-Berkeley professor
says such homicide cases are

not unthinkably rare

in the United States and he pointed to another case in Houston,
Texas, where a mother killed all five of her kids in 2001.
HOLLISTER

The recent killing of 19-month-old Donna May Busch is “not part of an ordinary culture of violence,” said Frank Zimring, a University of California, Berkeley law professor and a fellow of the American Society of Criminology.

But he also said in an interview with the Free Lance that such homicide cases are “not unthinkably rare” in the United States and he pointed to another instance in Houston in 2001 when a mother killed all five of her children. Closer to home, there also was a recent tragedy in Watsonville, where a 37-year-old mother is accused of suffocating her daughter to death in a motel room on Nov. 16, according to the Register-Pajaronian newspaper.

Zimring talked to the Free Lance about the suspected homicide of the local toddler by her mother, Cheryl L. Busch, on Wednesday at the family’s home in the 2300 block of Shore Road. Authorities publicly have said a potential reason for the shootings is unclear.

Zimring, though, said that with two shots fired at the child – to the chest and head – it “re-enforces some sort of mental instability.” He also pointed out that with the local child being 19 months old, it definitely was “not post-partum” depression – which can occur when children are much younger.

County Mental Health Director Alan Yamamoto, meanwhile, said there are emotional and mental concerns with the case but he could not say if they are any reasons behind the suspected crime. Mental health workers have been keeping a close watch on Busch at the San Benito County Jail, where she is being held in a safety cell and remains on suicide watch.

The bottom line, though, Zimring said, is that kids can be subjected to their parents’ instabilities.

“Children are hostages to the mental and emotional stability of the parents,” Zimring said.

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A staff member wrote, edited or posted this article, which may include information provided by one or more third parties.

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