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Suspected Baby Killer’s Attorneys Want His Statements Suppressed

Attorney for a Rogers man accused of killing an 11-month-old boy last summer are trying to suppress comments made by the suspect to police that they say may inc...
PROFFITT

Attorney for a Rogers man accused of killing an 11-month-old boy last summer are trying to suppress comments made by the suspect to police that they say may incriminate their client.

Tim Buckley, one of Proffitt’s attorneys, said Michael Proffitt did not talk to police voluntarily and did not have the intellectual capacity to understand the situation when the suspect told police he shook the infant boy because he would not stop crying, according to a motion submitted by Buckley to the Benton County Circuit Clerk’s Office last week.

Proffitt, 37, was arrested in June on suspicion of capital murder. His son was the fiancé of the baby’s mother, police said.

During an interview with police May 30, Proffitt was not read his Miranda rights by detectives. The next day, while talking to detectives, the suspect agreed to take a polygraph test the next week. The polygraph test was designed specifically to deceive Proffitt and make him seem guilty, the motion states.

“The situation itself was coercive,” the motion states of Proffitt’s first interview with police. “Defendant was in a small motel room with two police detectives who were aggressively seeking information about a very recent crime.”

The motion goes on to state that Proffitt was intimidated by police.

Proffitt was babysitting the baby at the 8th Street Motel in Rogers when the child was injured, police said. A witness told 5NEWS that when emergency officials took the boy from the motel room, the child’s injuries were evident.

“EMT comes up here and gets the little boy and they hurry up and rush him down, and he is black and blue,” said Viola Harris, 8TH Street Motel front desk worker.

The baby was taken to Mercy Medical Center for treatment. While the baby was in the hospital, the police department began an investigation that included interviews with family members. The baby was later taken to Arkansas Children’s Hospital in Little Rock, where he died two days later.

Proffitt told police he became frustrated when the child would not stop crying, the affidavit states. Proffitt told officers he became frustrated with the child and shook him about once a month.

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