'She was loving towards the other kids': Mother forced adopted 5-year-old son to drink from toilet before he died of head trauma, authorities say – Image for illustrative purposes only (Image credits: Pixabay)
Westmoreland County, Pa. — A Delmont mother’s trial for the death of her adopted 5-year-old son entered its second day as witnesses detailed a home environment that prosecutors described as one of isolation and abuse. Lauren Maloberti, 36, faces charges of criminal homicide, aggravated assault and child endangerment in connection with Landon Maloberti’s February 2023 death from blunt-force head trauma. The case, delayed for years, now unfolds before Judge Scott Mears with testimony revealing stark contrasts in how the defendant treated her children.[1][2]
Prosecutors Detail Descent into Abuse
Assistant District Attorney Cassidy Hatten set a grim tone during opening statements on Tuesday. She told jurors that Maloberti assumed a sacred responsibility by adopting Landon but allowed it to turn into cruelty. Landon endured isolation from his siblings, mistreatment and terror before his death, Hatten said. The boy arrived at a Pittsburgh-area hospital unconscious on January 30, 2023, carried over his mother’s shoulder with dozens of bruises and catastrophic brain swelling.[1]
Medical experts ruled the cause as blunt-force trauma consistent with torture. Prosecutors pointed to pretrial evidence of specific acts, including a possible strike to the head with a frying pan. Maloberti and her then-husband, Jacob, showed little urgency at the hospital, according to earlier reports. The couple’s home housed six children at the time, including biological, step and foster kids.[3]
Family Members Recall Inconsistent Explanations
Erika Dilascio, Maloberti’s sister-in-law and occasional caregiver for Landon, took the stand early in the trial. She described the mother as initially loving toward the boy but increasingly impatient as he grew. Maloberti complained that Landon misbehaved and withheld affection, Dilascio said. When questioned about the injuries, Maloberti first claimed a slip-and-fall where the child lay still briefly before recovering, an account Dilascio found insufficient for his condition.
Tammy Kemerer, Jacob Maloberti’s mother, testified about routine visits to the home. She portrayed Lauren as an attentive parent to her biological children Kaden, Bella and Lilly but distant with Landon. In late 2022, Kemerer found the boy confined to a couch in a corner of the living room. Other relatives, including Landon’s biological grandparents and Maloberti’s stepfather, noted escalating tensions after the family took in a foster infant in 2020, sparking jealousy and punishments.[1][2]
Defense Highlights Uncertainties
Maloberti’s attorney, Adam Gorzelsky, urged jurors to focus on gaps in the prosecution’s story. The case remains emotional with a child’s death at its center, he acknowledged, but prosecutors lack proof of what caused Landon’s fatal injuries. Investigators stopped digging too soon, Gorzelsky argued. Assistant counsel Tim Dawson suggested the trauma might stem from a fall or repeated accidents rather than deliberate assault.
Gorzelsky dismissed witness accounts as assumptions formed after the fact. Under scrutiny, he said, their observations fail to form a clear picture. The defense anticipates expert testimony to challenge the homicide narrative. Jacob Maloberti, facing identical charges in a separate trial, remains a key figure; prosecutors expect him to point blame at his ex-wife.[2]
From Custody to Catastrophe
Maloberti took custody of newborn Landon in 2017 after county authorities removed him from his biological parents, her cousin’s child. She formalized the adoption two years later. Conditions reportedly worsened after her 2021 marriage to Jacob and the arrival of additional children. Landon faced removal from school, constant monitoring and harsher discipline than his siblings.
Allegations from other children, now cleared to testify, include being smacked, sprayed with water, forced to drink from a toilet and isolated. A judge recently approved their statements from interviews with detectives and forensic specialists, with limits on repetition and prejudice. The household grew crowded, amplifying strains.[3]
What matters now: Over 60 witnesses, including young siblings and medical experts, will shape the next phase. Jacob Maloberti’s testimony could prove pivotal.
The trial, expected to span two weeks, underscores long-standing delays in holding parents accountable for alleged child torture. As testimony continues, the focus remains on piecing together the final days of a boy entrusted to those meant to protect him.
