A second home child-care provider in a month's time has been sentenced to jail in Dakota County for placing a child in an unsafe sleep position that contributed to a death.
Rebecca Graupmann of Farmington will start serving a 30-day jail sentence next Monday, after pleading guilty Tuesday to felony manslaughter in the death of 3-month-old Kaiden Staebell. Graupmann violated state safe sleep regulations by placing the infant to sleep on a bed and initially tried to cover up that mistake.
The circumstances are eerily similar to last month's sentencing of Beverly Greenagel, who is finishing her 45-day jail term linked to the August 2011 death of an infant at her former Eagan home day care. Both will be required in their sentences to serve probation terms and speak to other day-care providers in the county about avoiding the mistakes they had made.
Both infants' deaths were part of an alarming increase in fatalities over the past decade in licensed family child-care homes. Child-care deaths in Minnesota have declined over the past year, however, because of tougher licensing restrictions and increased awareness of safe sleep positions.
Dakota County Attorney James Backstrom said the cases were difficult but the sentences would hopefully deter other child-care providers from cutting corners on safety.
"No one ever claimed Mrs. Graupmann intentionally caused any harm to this child," Backstrom said, "but we did believe that her negligence constituted manslaughter."
Beyond the proximity of the providers and sentencings, their cases also have the common thread of deceit — at least when the providers discovered the infants unresponsive.
Graupmann told police on July 31, the day of Kaiden Staebell's death, that the infant had fallen asleep in a car seat after she fed him, according to law enforcement reports. When authorities later discovered a wet spot and blood on a comforter in an upstairs bedroom, Graupmann admitted to placing the infant to sleep on the bed. State authorities require licensed child-care providers to place infants to sleep on their backs in cribs — without thick blankets or toys — to reduce the risk of positional asphyxiation (a lack of breath because of one's body position).