Jordan Everhart was supposed to find out Tuesday how long he will have to go to prison for the beating death of his girlfriends 18-month-old daughter in 2011.
Now the 22-year-old will have to wait until April to find out. Everharts attorneys asked to delay Tuesdays sentencing hearing on a murder charge for more time to work on the case and Ada County prosecutors did not object.
Fourth District Judge Patrick Owen reset the sentencing for April 4. Everhart could be sent to prison for life.
An Ada County jury found Everhart guilty of first degree murder in November after a two week trial.
Ada County prosecutors had told the jury that 18-month-old Alaija Corbin had fresh injuries to her feet, ankles and shins on Oct. 7, 2011 the same night she suffered a fatal head wound.
They also said the toddler was shaken with such force that she had fresh tissue damage under her arms.
Prosecutors said all of the injuries were caused by Everhart as he watched the toddler that night while her mother worked a double shift. Everhart was angry because the little girl wouldnt go to sleep, prosecutors said, and he wanted to play Xbox.
Everharts attorney told the jury that there was not enough evidence to show Everhart hurt the toddler and asked the jury to begin deliberations not thinking about the death of a child, but by carefully considering all the evidence presented over the past several weeks.
Jurors ultimately agreed with prosecutors, finding Everhart guilty of first degree murder after only a few hours of deliberation.
Paramedics found the toddler unconscious and dressed in only a diaper on the floor of a trailer home in the 300 block of East 40th Street about 2:30 a.m. on Oct. 8, 2011.
When asked by a firefighter what happened, Everhart said the child fell backward and hit her head. He had told 911 dispatchers that a dog knocked down the little girl, Ada County Deputy Prosecutor Jill Longhurst said.
Paramedics took Alaija to St. Lukes Boise Medical Center, where she died.
Longhurst told the jury that forensic tests showed that the toddler was hit by a solid object hard enough to cause a fatal brain injury. When Everhart figured out the toddler was badly hurt, he first called his mom for advice, and then called the girls mother at work both before he called 911, Longhurst said.
Defense attorney Gus Cahill said that Everhart called his mom first because she is a nurse.
Cahill told the jury that Everhart was accused of committing a murder he didnt commit. He said the defendant was still dealing with injuries he sustained in a house fire years earlier and questioned whether Everhart had the physical strength to cause the toddlers injuries.
Patrick Orr: 377-6219


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