I let my daughter die’: Girl, 5, died of malnutrition with cartons of food outside her locked bedroom while her father played video games.

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I let my daughter die': Girl, 5, died of malnutrition with cartons of food outside her locked bedroom while her father played video games.

On April 14, 2024, Schenectady, New York, police responded to a home on Elmer Avenue for an unresponsive 5-year-old girl, Charlotte Buskey. They discovered her emaciated body—eyes sunken, severely dehydrated, and starved—in a locked bedroom, confined to an outgrown pack ‘n play with no food, water, or human contact despite food boxes nearby. Her 3-year-old brother was locked in a cage in the living room; both children tested positive for cocaine.

Perpetrator and Guilty Plea

Robert S. Buskey Jr., 35, the father, pleaded guilty on January 23, 2026, to second-degree murder (depraved indifference to human life), plus criminal sale of a controlled substance to a child. He admitted neglecting Charlotte for months, isolating the kids while using drugs and playing video games. Buskey told police, “I let my daughter die.” Sentencing is March 27, 2026: 27 years to life.

Prosecutors described the home as a “house of horrors,” with Buskey showing “utter disregard for human life” through “brutal, heinous acts.”

Victim Details and Context

  • Charlotte Buskey: Slept in fetal position in the pack ‘n play; autopsy confirmed starvation and dehydration. Her obituary noted her love for princesses, dressing up, and blowing bubbles—a “gentle soul.”
  • 3-Year-Old Brother: Survived; fate post-rescue unclear from reports.
  • Broader Pattern: Second child murder in Schenectady within 36 days. On March 9, 2024, 11-month-old Halo Branton was abandoned in a drainage pit by her mother, dying of hypothermia; mother convicted of murder/manslaughter.

Legal and Child Welfare Insights

New York’s second-degree murder via depraved indifference applies to extreme recklessness creating grave risk of death, fitting Buskey’s isolation and neglect. No intent to kill required—indifference suffices.

This highlights child welfare gaps:

IssueDetails in CaseSystemic Safeguards
Neglect DetectionNo doctor visits; isolation from family/worldMandatory reporting by neighbors/schools; home checks for at-risk families
Substance ExposureKids tested positive for cocaineDrug testing in custody cases; removal protocols
Confinement RisksLocked rooms/cagesCPS intervention thresholds; felony charges for endangerment
Community Response“Deplorable” home overlooked externallyAnonymous tip lines; welfare checks

Cases like this drive calls for expanded family monitoring in high-risk areas. District Attorney Robert M. Carney emphasized the “wickedness” mirroring Halo’s case.

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