COLUMBIA — A Boone County jury found Jennifer Johnson guilty Thursday of the murder of 8-month-old Hannah Kent in Columbia in 2021. Johnson was babysitting Hannah when she died.
The jury found Johnson guilty of second-degree felony murder and two counts of first-degree child endangerment.
Judge Brouck Jacobs said Johnson could face between 10 and 30 years in prison on each count, meaning Johnson could face up to 90 years in prison if she receives the maximum sentence and serves each count consecutively.
The jury announced the verdict just after 2 p.m. on Thursday, the third and final day of the trial. The jury deliberated for a little over an hour.
During closing arguments, the prosecutor, Risa Perkins, argued Johnson was the only person who could have killed Hannah. Although Johnson adamantly denied killing Hannah during questioning in 2021, Perkins pointed to other lies Johnson told. Johnson said she was asleep from 9 p.m. to midnight the night she babysat Hannah, but her phone records showed text and Facebook message activity during that time. A detective pointed out blood on Johnson's shirt, but Johnson said it was not there. A forensic scientist testified Thursday that the blood on Johnson's shirt matched Hannah's DNA.
Johnson also gave three different reasons for why Hannah's attire changed from when she was seen by her mother, Lanetta Hill, around 7 p.m., to when Hill next saw her the following morning. At first Johnson said Hannah's clothes had gotten wet from a sink overflow, then she said she took Hannah's clothes off because she was hot, and lastly she said Hannah had wet herself so Johnson had to clean the clothes.
The defense attorney, Manuel Tatayon, said Hannah's injuries the could have been her siblings' doing. The night Hannah died, she slept on the same bed as her 2-year-old and 3-year-old siblings. Tatayon also argued Johnson could have been intermittently sleeping between her phone activity from 9 p.m. to noon.
A sentencing hearing is set for Feb. 23, and attorneys may motion for a new trial.
