Mom gets life in prison for starving to death 6-year-old son

An Arizona mother has been sentenced to life in prison without the possibility of parole for locking her 6-year-old son in a urine-soaked closet and starving him to death — with the judge decrying her actions as “heinous, cruel and depraved.”

Elizabeth Archibeque, 29, pleaded guilty in May to first-degree murder and child abuse in the 2020 death of her son, Deshaun Martinez, who was found weighing a mere 18 lbs.

Archibeque’s lawyer had asked that her sentence include the possibility of parole after 35 years, but Coconino Superior Court Judge Ted Reed told the mom that while she did express some genuine remorse, her “heinous, cruel and depraved behavior” warranted imprisonment for “the rest of your natural life.”

Flagstaff police detective Melissa Seay testified during Thursday’s sentencing that she had never seen anything “so horrific” in her entire life, describing Deshaun as “just bones” when she found him at his family’s apartment.  

“His face was completely sunken in. It was just like a skeleton,” Seay said.

Elizabeth Archibeque, 29, was sentenced to life in prison without the possibility of parole in the 2020 starvation death of her 6-year-old son.
AP

Deshaun Martinez, 6
Deshaun Martinez was found weighing just 18 lbs and looking like a skeleton at the time of his death.

The boy and his 7-year-old brother had spent 16 hours a day for a month confined to a 21-by-25-inch closet, which reeked of a “foul, awful smell of urine,” Seay told the court.  

The detective testified that the 6-year-old’s brother was alive but also severely malnourished, with his bones protruding from his back and his ribs visible through the skin.

Prosecutor Michael Tunink said he decided not to show the evidence photos during the sentencing hearing because they were so “disturbing it is hard on anyone who has to see them.”

Archibeque testified on her own behalf, telling the court that she blamed herself for Deshaun’s death and fully accepted whatever punishment she received.


Elizabeth Archibeque reads a statement during her sentencing hearing in Coconino County's District 1 Courtroom Thursday, July 27, 2023
Archibeque expressed remorse during the sentencing, saying she blamed herself for her son’s starvation death.
AP

“A huge part of me died along with my beautiful child,” she said. “Not a day goes by that I do not grieve … I am so sorry.”

Deshaun’s father, Anthony Martinez, and paternal grandmother, Ann Martinez, also have been charged with murder and child abuse but have pleaded not guilty and were being tried separately.

Archibeque’s public defender, Christine Brown, suggested Thursday that the other two family members bore the brunt of the responsibility for the abuse of the children, which ultimately resulted in Deshaun’s death.

The skeletal child was found unresponsive on March 2, 2020, after his grandmother called 911 to report that she thought her grandson was dead.

An autopsy determined that Deshaun died of severe starvation, and the manner of death was ruled a homicide.


Anthony Jose Archibeque-Martinez, from left, Elizabeth Archibeque-Martinez, and Ann Marie Martine
Archibeque, center, had been charged with murder and child abuse along with Deshaun’s father, Anthony Martinez, left, and paternal grandmother, Ann Martinez, right.
Coconino County Sheriff’s Office

Archibeque and Anthony Martinez initially told police that Deshaun was malnourished because of a medical condition, or his ingestion of diet or caffeine pills.

But eventually the pair admitted that they kept the 6-year-old and his brother locked in a closet and gave them little to eat as punishment for stealing food at night, police said.

The couple’s two daughters, ages 4 and 2, were found healthy in the apartment.

In her appeal for mercy on her client’s behalf, Brown said Archibeque was addicted to methamphetamine at birth, had a traumatic upbringing and suffered from mental issues.

The mom-of-four claimed that her husband and mother-in-law terrorized her and she “felt powerless” to do anything to improve their home life.


In this March 4, 2020, file photo, Wanda Ahasteen stops by a memorial for Deshaun Martinez in Flagstaff, Ariz.
Deshaun and his 7-year-old brother had been locked in a tiny closet reeking of urine for 16 hours a day for a month as punishment for stealing food.
AP

Brown said Archibeque “is very aware she will spend the rest of her life in prison” but feels a “huge sense of relief” knowing her surviving children now live in a better place with a foster family.

The foster mother who took in Deshaun’s siblings testified that his older brother was “so traumatized about food and eating” that he would “ask every five minutes” when they would eat next and kept a “special little lunch box with snacks that would never leave his side.”

With Post wires

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