A very young boy has been forced to watch as his mother was beaten and thrown off a cliff to her death before he was himself killed.
The boy was killed after being forced to watch his mother being battered
According to The Sun UK report, a mere five-year-old boy has been found dead after he watched his mother being beaten, bound and thrown off a cliff by a family friend, according to police.
The mother survived and was found by two hikers who alerted cops in Kentucky, US, prompting a two-day search that ended Monday morning when the boy’s body was discovered.
Little James Spoonamore’s remains were found near where his mother was left for dead although investigators still do not know how he was killed.
Results of an autopsy won’t be available for another two days.
His mother, Jessica Durham, is recovering at a Lexington hospital.
Lonnie Belt, 41, has been arrested and charged with assault, kidnapping and tampering with evidence.
The suspect was later charged with the killing of the five-year-old, reports WBIR.com.
Kentucky State Police Commissioner Rick Sanders said other charges are pending. It’s unclear if Belt has an attorney.
Sanders said Durham and Belt are acquaintances and were not romantically involved.
Police offered few details of what happened.
But a police report says Belt and Durham got into a fight over some money and “he hit her on the head, tied her up and took her to the cliff where he assaulted her again.”
Sanders said two hikers discovered Durham Saturday morning at the bottom of an 80-foot embankment.
“James was with Jessica when he took her to the cliff and assaulted her,” the report states.
Sanders declined to answer questions about what happened. He said more than 200 people searched for the boy on Saturday and Sunday.
The search involved police dogs, aircraft from the National Guard and lots of volunteers.
Sanders said authorities found the boy at 9:31am about 180 feet off the road in Jackson County, about 65 miles southeast of Lexington.
The news was devastating for Durham and her family, which includes some relatives in Florida who were enduring Hurricane Irma while authorities were searching for the boy.
“Honestly, it’s been hell. That’s the only way to describe it,” said Mary Batson, Durham’s sister.
Cynthia Wallace, Durham’s mother and the boy’s grandmother, said she is still without power at her home near Winter Haven, Florida.
She described James as a sweet boy who loved playing with cars and trucks and being in the water.
He recently started kindergarten, and Wallace said she enjoyed looking at photos Durham sent her of the boy’s first day at school.
“He was so happy, he loved school and he even wanted to go on the weekends,” Wallace said. “It’s hard. It hurts. I just went through a hurricane and all of this here on top of me, I’m just hurt.”
A version of this story originally appeared in the New York Post.