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Muskin warned that the tragedy shouldn't be blamed entirely on a straying boyfriend. "Maybe he missed the signs; maybe they didn't have a great relationship," he said. "But did he predict that she would kill herself and the children?" It's unclear whether Pierre was talking about affairs when he said in a statement he issued last week that "If I could, I would have changed some things in my past." "I have been inaccurately portrayed as being directly responsible for the tragedy," he said. Pierre, who's working at a Dunkin' Donuts in Newburgh, was labeled a "deadbeat dad" in some news accounts but O'Connor said there was never any such allegation relating to his children with Armstrong. Pierre's lawyers also said that a child endangerment charge against Pierre, stemming from when a 2-year-old boy was found wandering the streets in February, was resolved without a conviction. He was ordered to attend parenting classes as a condition of a dismissal, O'Connor said, and his lawyers are trying to get that revised because "it would be too sad" now that his children are dead. The lawyer said Pierre "was very active in his children's lives" right until their last days. His decision to have a separate funeral and burial for the children was announced the day before a planned joint service arranged by Armstrong's family. Pierre said he wanted to grieve for his children privately, rather than at the open service that was planned.
Armstrong's family was critical. "She gave birth to them," said Armstrong's cousin Channise White. "At the end of the day, no matter what, they are her children. They should be buried with her." Muskin called it a decision "that allowed people to target him." Palmiter said, "It's so easy just to say and do things that inflame the situation. If it weren't for the tremendous pain maybe it wouldn't be as inflaming." The experts said whatever his faults, it's wrong to blame the tragedy entirely on the father. "He didn't drive the vehicle into the river," Mallon said. "But he has to live with what happened to his children. He will probably carry that horror with him for the rest of his life."
[Associated
Press;
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