BELFAST — Attorneys for the Stockton Springs mother accused of participating in the beating death of her 10-year-old daughter continued a campaign Thursday to get two state prosecutors, and potentially the entire Attorney General’s Office, removed from the case.

Sharon Carrillo and her husband, Julio Carrillo, each face a charge of depraved indifference murder in connection with the February death of Marissa Kennedy, who was found dead at the family’s Stockton Springs condominium with evidence of trauma to her head and abdomen.

Police say the Carrillos confessed to attempting to stage the girl’s death as an accident and had beaten the girl for months before she died, continuing even after Marissa showed difficulty walking and started slurring her speech.

Sharon Carrillo’s case has been the more active of the two, and has centered on her intellectual capacity. Her attorneys have said she has a low intelligence level and was abused by her husband. The state has requested its own psychological evaluation of Sharon Carrillo.

Defense attorneys Christopher MacLean and Laura Shaw scored a victory this month when Waldo County Superior Court Justice Robert Murray agreed to disqualify school and employment records that the state obtained using invalid subpoenas.

The records included progress reports, report cards, an individualized education plan and a psychological evaluation, according to a school official.

Advertisement

Murray ordered state prosecutors to turn over any records they received along with affidavits from any state employees or police who reviewed the records.

MacLean on Thursday said six of the nine affidavits returned by the state were not valid, either because they were not notarized or they didn’t meet the statutory standard for an affidavit.

Specifically, he said, affidavits from Assistant Attorneys General Leane Zainea and Donald Macomber, the state’s lead prosecutors in the case, contained no written reference to having been notarized under oath, and, in at least one case, had a word missing where “sworn” might typically have been printed.

MacLean said the notary, whose seal appeared on other affidavits submitted by the state, would have known the difference between a sworn and unsworn statement.

MacLean’s argument built on his team’s previous assertions that the state circumvented the law to get key documents.

The Attorney General’s Office in March used a subpoena to get confidential records from Maplebrook School, a private boarding school for people with intellectual disabilities in Amenia, N.Y., that Sharon Carrillo attended. The state also subpoenaed employment records for both Sharon and Julio Carrillo from the Walmart Supercenter in Newburgh, N.Y.

Advertisement

Both subpoenas included a date for an upcoming hearing that never existed, according to MacLean. The prosecution also bypassed a step required to subpoena records from an institution outside of Maine. MacLean and Shaw argued that the document had no legal standing but was meant to trick the recipient into believing there was no choice but to comply.

Officials from Maplebrook School sent Sharon Carrillo’s confidential files to state prosecutors. On Thursday, Macomber handed over a slim envelope of records from Walmart that he said arrived since the last hearing.

At the previous hearing, Macomber and Zainea expressed remorse and told Murray that the errors were unintentional.

“People make mistakes,” Macomber said. “I made a mistake.”

Macomber said the subpoenas sent to Maplebrook School and Walmart were “friendly subpoenas,” not intended to deceive the recipients, but in essence to provide the correct paperwork to an institution that was willing to provide the requested records.

MacLean said it would be hard to prove the prosecution didn’t gain from viewing Sharon Carrillo’s school records. He referred to an affidavit from State Police Detective Jason Andrews, who said he had been looking at the school files specifically for the names of Sharon Carrillo’s former roommates and her extracurricular activities at the school.

Advertisement

He claimed not to have found these, but MacLean said that type of information could be gleaned from documents to advance their case without explicitly using the documents themselves.

This, MacLean said, represented a conflict of interest and was grounds for disqualifying the entire Attorney General’s Office. Alternatively, he said the court could view it as an ethics violation and remove Macomber and Zainea but allow the attorney general to appoint replacements.

“It’s an unusual case that requires an unusual remedy,” he said.

Murray said he would make a ruling at a later date.

Speaking outside the courthouse Thursday, Macomber reiterated that his office had made mistakes but said those mistakes amounted to a distraction from the real concern at hand.

“The defense is trying to make this about the prosecution,” he said. “This case is not about the prosecution, it’s about Marissa Kennedy and what happened to her.”

Comments are not available on this story.