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Left inset: Pearl Fernandez (KABC/YouTube). Right inset: Gabriel Fernandez (CASA). Background: The California residence where Pearl Fernandez tortured and abused her 8-year-old son Gabriel Fernandez to death (KCBS/YouTube).
In a harrowing case that has captured national attention, Pearl Fernandez, a mother from Palmdale, California, is once again seeking to overturn her life sentence for the horrific murder of her 8-year-old son, Gabriel. Convicted of first-degree murder in 2018, Fernandez was sentenced to life in prison without the possibility of parole for the brutal abuse she and her boyfriend inflicted on the young boy.
Fernandez, now 42, asserts that her original guilty plea was the result of coercion by her state-appointed defense attorney, who she claims provided “ineffective assistance of counsel.” In her latest bid for resentencing, Fernandez argues that she was pressured into accepting the plea deal that led to her current life sentence, as reported by local sources including ABC affiliate KABC and City News Service.
The tragic case centers on the prolonged and severe abuse of Gabriel Fernandez, who died from blunt force trauma and sustained child abuse. Despite her guilty plea, Pearl Fernandez has continued to seek legal avenues to contest her sentence. Her boyfriend, Isauro Aguirre, was also convicted for his role in the abuse and received a death sentence.
Fernandez’s first attempt at resentencing in 2021 was unsuccessful. During that hearing, she made similar claims that her involvement in her son’s death was overstated. However, prosecutors presented evidence of the appalling conditions Gabriel endured, including being forced to eat cat feces and being confined to a cramped, closet-like box.
Deputy District Attorney Jonathan Hatami, during the 2021 hearing, emphasized the extensive abuse Gabriel suffered, stating, “Clearly Pearl was involved in that child abuse, starving Gabriel, keeping him in the box for eight months, not taking him for medical aid, pepper-spraying him in the face, hitting him with a baseball bat — so many things were brought out in the trial,” as reported by the Los Angeles Times.
Undeterred by her previous denial, Fernandez has recently filed new documents to seek resentencing once again. She claims to have had assistance with her latest petition, according to the reports from KABC and CNS.
Fernandez alleges that “the petitioner has comprehension issues and documented verbal comprehension of a second grade student” and that she was “mistakenly under the impression that her case would then be going to appeal” when she signed the plea agreement before her 2018 conviction.
Hatami told CNS that he plans to once again “fight to make sure this doesn’t happen.” A hearing has been set for March 30.
“These repeated requests to be re-sentenced are unfair and unjust to Gabriel, Gabriel’s family, his siblings and our L.A. community,” Hatami blasted. “Having to continuously relive these events and trauma for the family is not humane. At some point in the criminal justice process, we must stand up for the victims and for justice. So, as long as I’m around this planet, I will continue to do my part and make sure Gabriel receives justice and is never forgotten.”
Fernandez was accused of abusing her son because she “believed the boy was gay,” according to a 2018 press release announcing her guilty plea.
“Gabriel suffered numerous injuries, including a fractured skull, 12 broken ribs and burns,” the press release from the Los Angeles County District Attorney’s Office said.
Fernandez pleaded guilty to first-degree murder and admitted to the special circumstance allegation of intentional murder by torture. Aguirre was found guilty of first-degree murder and the special circumstance allegation of intentional murder by torture.
As previously reported by Law&Crime, social workers who handled Gabriel’s abuse case were accused of felony child abuse and falsifying public records, but had their cases dismissed in 2020. Their defense attorneys argued that the abuse Gabriel suffered got worse after the state closed out the boy’s file. They also said the social workers did not have enough evidence to take the boy away from his mother.