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"I just wanted to say a prayer for them and for the boy who's going to go through a lot," Colon said. Callahan added: "They were innocent babies." Jay Vandervort, a Newburgh resident who said he was a friend of Armstrong's, also stopped by the boat ramp. He said he last saw her about a month ago. "She just seemed happy-go-lucky, like everything's good," he said. A few dozen people gathered on the landing Thursday evening next to the makeshift shrine to offer up prayers for the family and toss handfuls of symbolically cleansing salt into the river. Armstrong's aunt had called police at about 7:45 p.m. Tuesday to report a domestic incident at her niece's apartment. By the time police got there, she was gone. Besides Armstrong, Landen Pierre, 5, Lance Pierre, 2, and 11-month-old Laianna Pierre died. Earlier that day, Armstrong appeared stressed when she picked up the children at the Young and Unique Christian Development Child Care, said Shaniesha Strange, supervisor in the infant room. Police questioned the man they identified as the father of the three dead children, Jean Pierre, but did not give details. He apparently didn't live with the mother and children and could not immediately be located for comment. Police on Thursday confirmed that Pierre was charged with child endangerment in February when a boy who died in the minivan was found wandering the streets half-naked after 1 a.m. No further details were released by police, and the status of the case was not immediately available. Hetty Minatee, another teacher at the day care center, said Armstrong had enrolled the four children there in September. At first, Jean Pierre would come in with Armstrong and sometimes would pick up the kids. "A couple weeks ago, she came in a little upset," Minatee said. "She said,
'Miss Minatee, I don't want the father to pick the kids up or have any contact with them.' She said she was trying to get a court order so he could never see the kids again." La'Shaun is staying with the aunt, Angela Gilliam. He's "doing fine," Gilliam said. "She was a good mother. She was going through some stuff," Gilliam said of her niece. "Nobody knows what my niece went through." She would not elaborate. The boy told Ryan that Armstrong made a cellphone call to her mother as she sped toward the water, asking for forgiveness. Ryan said La'Shaun blames himself for never teaching his siblings how to swim. Ryan said she kissed him on the head before she left and told him, "You're in my prayers."
[Associated
Press;
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