CHICAGO, IL – The father of Navin Jones, an 8-year-old boy who died of severe malnutrition and abuse in 2022, was found guilty of first-degree murder Friday after a weeklong trial that detailed the abuse and shed light on how the Department of Children and Family Services (DCFS) did not act to remove the child from his parent’s care.
Brandon Walker, 42, was sentenced to life in prison after the jury found him guilty of murdering Navin in a “brutal and heinous manner, indicative of wanton cruelty.”
Navin weighed only 30 pounds when his mother, Stephanie Jones, found him unresponsive in his room in March 2022. Jones, 37, pleaded guilty to murder and will be sentenced on April 25 where she faces up to 100 years in prison.
Jurors were shown graphic photos of Navin’s skeleton body with cuts, bruises and scars, as well as the horrific conditions he lived in including a desolate bedroom littered with feces. Other images showed how Navin progressively grew skinnier in the final 18 months of his life.
The trial also revealed how a DCFS investigator believed she didn’t have the authority to remove the boy from his parent’s home about a month before he died, even though she observed him to be sickly. Prosecutors say if she did her job, Navin may still be alive.
The prosecutor also placed blame on Navin’s parents for trying to deceive the state agency. Walker’s conviction represents the latest failure of DCFS to care for some of the state’s most vulnerable residents and have those lapses showcased during a criminal trial. DCFS has repeatedly come under sharp criticism for failing to intercede to protect children at risk. In October, in another case, a Lake County judge found one of two former DCFS employees guilty of ignoring warning signs of abuse of another child who died, 5-year-old A.J. Freund.
Navin and his older brother were temporarily living with his parents for several months when the boy died on March 29, 2022. Their grandmother and guardian, Laura Walker, attempted to remove them from her son’s home and had sought help from the police and DCFS, according to her testimony.
The pathologist who performed Navin’s autopsy testified that the boy died from severe malnutrition and abuse. The state further proved the neglect and abuse that occurred in the home by showing how there were no doorknobs on Navin’s door, instead a rope was used to close the door. Medical experts testified there were ligature marks on his wrists, indicating he was tied up.
Police also described a “putrid” smell in a closet in his room, in which they found feces smeared on the walls. A note was also on Navin’s door telling the older brother to not let Navin out or provide him with any food.
The problem with DCFS
DCFS had been involved in Navin’s life since he was an infant when he tested positive for opiates and was put under the agency’s custody. Four years later, Laura Walker gained permanent guardianship.
During the summer of 2021, Laura took a short trip to visit her ailing mother in Florida and planned to leave Navin with his parents for 10 days. When she returned to Illinois, she said her son and Jones refused to return Navin. She subsequently contacted Peoria police and DCFS, but the boy remained with his parents.
DCFS made several attempts to visit the children, but it wasn’t until February 2022 when DCFS investigator Kathy Harvey visited the home and observed Navin to be gaunt, sickly and “very thin,” according to her testimony. Harvey testified she did not believe at the time she had the authority to help Navin get medical care.
“I was afraid for his health,” Laura Walker testified, explaining why she decided to turn over temporary guardianship to her son. “I was afraid there was something critically wrong. The caseworker insisted this was the only way to get medical attention and I signed it and sent it.”
Harvey said she received the guardianship paperwork from Laura Walker in the mail on March 29, 2022, the day Navin died.
Charles Golbert, the Cook County Public Guardian, told Illinois Answers that he believes “Harvey was seriously wrong in her initial assessment.” Golbert’s office represents more than 7,000 children in Cook County and advocates for their best interests.
“That erroneous belief reflects a huge failure of training at DCFS, or judgment, or lack of appropriate supervision, or perhaps a combination,” he wrote in an email. He added if there are concerns about a child’s health, the agency can take protective custody of a child for up to two days without going to an emergency room.
He also noted that the agency’s investigators have caseloads that far exceed national rates with DCFS’s investigator vacancy rate at more than 20%.
An Illinois Answers Project investigation last year found that the state agency has been plagued with issues, including riding abuse and neglect complaints and a number of children who died while in the agency’s care.
In January, the agency’s Office of Inspector General published a report that found there were 171 child deaths involving DCFS in the fiscal year 2022 – the year Navin died. A September state audit showed how the agency repeatedly failed to follow state laws aimed at protecting children from abuse and neglect.
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When DCFS oversteps its bounds, our seasoned DCFS lawyers at the Dinizulu Law Group are there to protect the rights of parents and caregivers. Please call us as soon as possible if your family is under investigation. This is not an admission of guilt or wrongdoing. It is simply a sign that you take your family’s future seriously.
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