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Ramkissoon's mother and stepfather and Javon's paternal grandmother wept in court as prosecutors described the boy's death. The petite Ramkissoon, a native of Trinidad, was calm, answering the judge's questions in a barely audible voice. When asked her address, she gave the location of the city jail. Asked later whether she had any other place she called home, she said, "No." Ramkissoon's mother, Seeta Khadan-Newton, said the cult manipulated her daughter into disowning her family. "We are behind her now. We are in the past," Khadan-Newton said. Geraldine Ridgley, Javon's paternal grandmother, said Ramkissoon deserves a stiffer punishment. The boy's father, Robert Thompson, was not in court Monday. Ridgley said he was ill. Thompson was in jail when Javon was born. After the boy died, the cult members left his body inside the apartment where they lived until it began to decompose, according to police documents and the statement of facts. In early 2007, they stuffed the body inside a suitcase and filled it with mothballs and fabric softener sheets to mask the odor. The cult members relocated to Philadelphia, where they befriended an elderly man and stored the suitcase in a shed behind his home. It remained there for more than a year before police found it, the documents say. The judge also ordered the four co-defendants to appear before another judge Tuesday to receive a new trial date. Alleged cult leader Queen Antoinette and ex-members Trevia Williams and Marcus A. Cobbs are being held without bail. Steven L. Bynum is free on his own recognizance.
[Associated
Press;
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