Cheryl L. Busch is seen in court late last week. Her longtime friend told the Free Lance she was a dedicated worker and loving mother, but also that she had expressed some frustration with her obligations.

A longtime client of Cheryl Busch who had become friends with
her over the past eight years described the woman accused of
killing her 19-month-old daughter as being dedicated to her
grooming business and loving toward her child, but at times also
displaying signs of isolation and recently expressing frustration
over the amount of work involved with raising a growing
toddler.
HOLLISTER

A longtime client of Cheryl Busch who had become friends with her over the past eight years described the woman accused of killing her 19-month-old daughter as being dedicated to her grooming business and loving toward her child, but at times also displaying signs of isolation and recently expressing frustration over the amount of work involved with raising a growing toddler.

Jeanette Langstaff, of Hollister, came to know Busch about eight years ago after she had been seeking a groomer for her medium border collie dog and was referred to Cheryl’s Chateau, her pet-grooming and boarding business.

Before her arrest Nov. 19, Busch most recently had been running Cheryl’s Chateau out of the residence and outbuildings at their home in the 2300 block of Shore Road, which Langstaff noted is John Busch’s long-held family property. Before they married about two years ago, though, the business had operated from her prior residence on Pan Tempo Way near Lone Tree Road, the Hollister resident said.

Langstaff said she had taken her dog to the groomer about every two and a half months since they met.

“You get to know a person,” said Langstaff, who also noted that Busch is “visually disadvantaged” and, she understands, legally blind. “We became friends because I’m a very open person. She’s very dedicated to her work, a very caring person.”

She said that whenever her daughter Donna Busch had been awake, the mother would bring her out to see the visitor.

“We could see the love and pride she had in her daughter,” she said.

But Langstaff also said Busch – who has pleaded not guilty to homicide – “had gone through a lot” after getting divorced and remarried while making the move to a more rural area of San Benito County.

“It’s too bad maybe that there was this isolation,” she said.

Langstaff talked about the last time she saw Busch two and a half weeks ago, when she said the mother remarked she had been having a hard time.

“The last time she was saying, here she is, 39, and Donna’s getting bigger, and it’s so much work. She made that comment.”

Langstaff said she had not been aware of any problems with her husband and she was surprised about Busch’s prior conviction for battery, for which she spent nearly a month in county jail. The county’s chief probation officer, meanwhile, has said Busch had been complying with all her court requirements, including regular attendance to domestic violence classes.

For Langstaff, it’s unfortunate Busch had not received the help her friend is convinced she needed.

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