Witness pleaded for her nephew's life
Renee Horton testifies in the murder trial of Karen E. Robidoux that she was threatened by sect leader Jacques Robidoux after she protested the 11-month-old's starvation.
10:03 AM EST on Friday, January 30, 2004
BY MICHAEL P. McKINNEY
Journal Staff Writer
TAUNTON -- Fear overcame Renee Horton. Her nephew Samuel
Robidoux's eyes were sunken, his pudgy cheeks a memory. But when she
confronted the infant's father, her brother-in-law, he warned her:
Accept the boy's starvation as God's will, believe the infant will
survive, or your family will suffer.
Four years later, Samuel is with God. Photographs of his bones are a
courtroom exhibit. Horton testified through tears in Superior Court
yesterday that she tried a few times to tell the boy's father, Jacques
Robidoux -- a powerful elder in the insular Attleboro religious sect --
that this "vision" for the 11-month-old was wrong.
Horton, no longer a sect member, said Jacques Robidoux threatened her in
response. At a sect meeting, Samuel was present for all to see, weeks
into his sect-imposed regimen of no solid food. Yet these were people
who no longer believed their eyes, people who agreed to ban eyeglasses
as tools of Satan.
"I told [Jacques Robidoux] that it didn't make any sense. That if this
was truly about Karen [Robidoux's] vanity, then nursing Samuel would do
no good," Horton said on the fourth day of testimony in the murder trial
of her sister Karen E. Robidoux, Samuel's mother. "He said, 'This is
what God said.' "
The Attleboro sect, founded by Roland Robidoux -- Jacques' father -- by
the late 1990s rejected the outside world and handed down sometimes
extreme visions, or "leadings," that members were to follow. Sect member
G. Michelle Mingo claimed to have a vision from God that said Samuel
must be only breast-fed. The reason? Karen Robidoux must atone for vain
interest in her appearance.
The boy had already begun eating solid food. The breast-milk regimen
left him dead in April 1999 after 51 days. Karen Robidoux could not
produce enough breast milk for Samuel because she was pregnant at the
time, according to the prosecutor and the defense lawyer. As part of the
sect's vision, she was ordered to drink at least a gallon a day of
almond milk, which did not provide enough nutrients.
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AP photo
IN COURT: Karen E. Robidoux wipes tears from her eyes during yesterday's testimony.
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Karen and Jacques Robidoux lived in the basement of Renee and Dan
Horton's house during the time Samuel weakened. Karen Robidoux, 29, and
Renee Horton, 33, are daughters of Roger and Vivian Daneau, who were
heavily involved in the sect. Horton testified that, prior to March
1999, Samuel was sitting up by himself, crawling, beginning to explore.
Once the diet began, she only saw him being held.
Horton said that the day she heard Mingo's vision, she told Karen
Robidoux it was "ridiculous." Robidoux, she said, sobbed. Horton said
similar moments would follow, with Robidoux saying she didn't know what
to do and, at one point, collapsing in Horton's arms.
"At one point, 'Karen said, I can't take this anymore,' " Horton
recalled for the 12 jurors and 4 alternates.
Walter Shea, the Bristol County assistant district attorney, zeroed in
on opportunities when Karen Robidoux -- and others around her -- might
have exercised free will to save Samuel.
How close was the nearest hospital to their house? Shea asked.
About one mile, Horton said.
How far away was a grocery store?
About five miles, Horton said.
How far away was the police department?
About one mile, Horton said.
Yes, Horton said, there was a phone in the house.
Yet Daniel Horton, Renee's husband, said he felt "paralyzed" in the sect
by the fear instilled by leaders such as Roland Robidoux. Under
questioning from defense lawyer Joseph F. Krowski, he testified that
because of the sect indoctrination "the thought didn't enter into my
mind" that Samuel Robidoux would die.
There was no way Jacques Robidoux would ever let Karen Robidoux leave?
Krowski asked. "I couldn't picture it," Daniel Horton said.
Krowski, Robidoux's lawyer, has gotten the Hortons and most former sect
members to testify that they were powerless and that they did things in
the sect they would not contemplate now, such as a trip to Maine in
which their children were denied food for some three days.
Renee Horton, however, was more resistant to Krowski's assertions. He
challenged her more aggressively, talking up the fact that she had
immunity from prosecution to testify against her sister but asserting
that she did not take action to help Robidoux and her baby.