Mother sentenced for 2-year-old girl's beating death
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Left: Sarah Newsom (Wichita County Jail). Right: Scarlette “Olivia” Newsom (GoFundMe).

A Texas mother has been sentenced to a lengthy prison term for her role in the tragic death of her 2-year-old daughter, concluding a protracted legal struggle by prosecutors in the state to hold those accountable for the crime.

On Monday, 30-year-old Sarah Elizabeth Newsom admitted guilt to a charge of injuring a child due to her failure to protect, resulting in severe harm, as documented by Clay County records examined by Law&Crime.

Shortly thereafter, Judge Trish Coleman Byars of the 97th Judicial District Court handed down a 22-year state prison sentence to Newsom.

Having been released on bail since 2022, Newsom was promptly taken back into custody by the Clay County Sheriff’s Office to commence her sentence for the toddler’s death. By early Tuesday, she was being held at the Wichita County Jail.

The tragic events unfolded on October 18, 2018, when the young Scarlette “Olivia” Newsom suffered a brutal beating at the hands of 30-year-old Joshua Thomas Fulbright, leading to her hospitalization at Cook Children’s Hospital in Fort Worth.

On that day, Newsom initially brought Olivia in to the emergency room at Clay County Memorial Hospital wrapped in a blanket and told officials the little girl “had the flu,” according to a courtroom report by Wichita Falls-based NBC affiliate KFDX.

But that wasn’t the case at all.

Rather, the child’s face was covered in bruises. The witness went on to describe the night as “horrific” and said of the unresponsive girl, that she was “limp and floppy” and “wasn’t sure if she was alive.”

“Not a surface on the child that had no injuries,” the witness testified during the first day of Fulbright’s trial which began in February.

On March 10, Fulbright was convicted of capital murder.

The third time was the charm for prosecutors in Montague County – which is adjacent to Clay County and which, combined with Archer County, make up the 97th Judicial District. The state attempted to try Fulbright twice before. A mistrial was declared in 2019 after a jury could not be seated out of the respective juror pool; a second mistrial was declared in 2022 after the defendant’s own attorney was arrested, according to KFDX and the Times Record News.

During the man’s trial, Newsom took the stand, KFDX reported.

She described leaving her daughter with her then-boyfriend while she went to work. But, soon things changed, the mother testified.

“I never witnessed her mad with anyone,” she said. “It was new and different.”

Joshua Fulbright and Sarah Newsom appear in booking photos from 2019.

Left to right: Joshua Fulbright and Sarah Newsom in 2019 (Clay County Sheriff’s Office).

The mother went on to testify Fulbright began punishing her daughter with time-outs, then with forcing the little girl to squat against the wall — sometimes up to 10 minutes at a time. Then, as the punishments grew more intense, the girl would falter and could not complete them. In those instances, Fulbright would begin by spanking the child — who was not his daughter — ultimately beating Olivia all over her body.

“Why did you let him do that?” 97th Judicial District Attorney Katie Boggeman asked.

To which Newsom replied: “I didn’t have a choice.”

On at least one occasion, Newsom admittedly slapped her daughter in an effort to bring her out of seizure-like behavior, according to court documents obtained by the Record News.

“These evil acts on this angel has absolutely stopped the families world from spinning,” Olivia’s aunt wrote in a GoFundMe for funeral expenses.

Fulbright, for his part, is currently appealing the judgment and sentence — alleging the court improperly excluded testimony favorable to the defense and that prosecutors were vindictive.

In accepting a plea deal, however, Newsom waived her right to appeal.

In a statement provided to the local TV station, Boggeman said the plea agreement was made “after a lot of consideration.”

“As a mom, I don’t know any amount of time is enough, but it was the right move for our county and to finally let that baby rest in peace,” the prosecutor added.

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