Most recently, Seay said, Latasha was raped by a stranger from whom she sought help in finding her birth father.
Seay said he did not yet know how much emotional trauma Latasha suffered in the past and how much that played a role in the events of June 16, when, Latasha told police, she choked Tanisha Collins, 2, the granddaughter of Latasha's adoptive parents, Bea and Sam Speight.
Latasha was scheduled for a preliminary hearing yesterday before Municipal Court Judge James M. DeLeon. She appeared briefly in court, handcuffed and dressed in a crisp orange T-shirt and a skirt and vest of matching kente cloth. Her shiny hair was smoothed into bangs in the front and a braid in the back. Her expression, that blank stare teenagers wear when they would prefer to keep their feelings private.
The hearing was rescheduled for July 13 to allow time for a psychiatric evaluation.
Assistant District Attorney Randolph Williams said he could not comment on the pending case. The Speights were not in court yesterday and could not be reached by telephone.
According to police sources, Latasha argued with Bea Speight on the afternoon of the June 16. Shortly afterward, police said, when Latasha was alone with Tanisha, she put the child on the dining room floor of the Speights' Cedarbrook home and choked her. Latasha then put the body in a stroller and wheeled it to the rear of the 8400 block of Pickering Street, police said, where she left it behind a stranger's door.
Neighbors called police and rescue units, who arrived to find the child dead. Latasha returned to the scene and stood by while emergency workers attended to the body, police said. Later she gave a statement to police, sources said.
Latasha's biological sister, Mary Amos, 16, was in court yesterday with her own adoptive mother, Virgail Amos, who said she had known Latasha since she was a baby.
"She's a sweet child," Virgail Amos said outside the courtroom. "She's not a misbehaving child."