A West Virginia woman was sentenced to up to life in prison Wednesday in the death of her teenage daughter whose emaciated body was found at their home in a case that prompted scrutiny of the state's overwhelmed child welfare system.
Julie Miller will be eligible for parole after serving 15 years in the April 2024 death of Kyneddi Miller.
A criminal complaint said that the 14-year-old girl had an eating disorder and that Julie Walker had not sought medical care for her daughter in at least four years. Boone County Prosecutor Dan Holstein said Kyneddi Miller spent the last several days of her life alone on a bathroom floor and weighed 58 pounds (26 kilograms).
''This child literally starved to death,'' Boone County Circuit Judge Stacy Nowicki-Eldridge said during the sentencing. ''No child should ever have to go through that.''
Julie Miller, 51, pleaded guilty in November to death of a child by parent, guardian or custodian.
Two of the girl's grandparents lived at the home in Morrisvale. Jerry Stone was found incompetent to stand trial due to declining cognitive ability while Donna Stone faces trial next month on a charge of child neglect resulting in death.
A federal audit released in November that was prompted by the girl's death found the state didn't comply with requirements for responding to reports of child abuse and neglect, including failing in most cases to interview children or adults or assess immediate safety risks.
The death also prompted a state investigation into whether law enforcement and child protective services could have intervened. The state Department of Human Services now requires potential abuse and neglect cases to be referred to an intake telephone number so they can be formally documented.