The Virginian-Pilot
                             THE VIRGINIAN-PILOT 
              Copyright (c) 1995, Landmark Communications, Inc.

DATE: Saturday, March 25, 1995               TAG: 9503250332
SECTION: LOCAL                    PAGE: B4   EDITION: FINAL 
SOURCE: ASSOCIATED PRESS 
DATELINE: LEESBURG                           LENGTH: Medium:   58 lines

JUDGE DECLARES MISTRIAL IN NANNY CASE DUTCH TEENAGER, ACCUSED OF SHAKING BABY SO VIOLENTLY HE DIED, FACES NEW TRIAL.

A judge declared a mistrial Friday night after the jury could not reach a verdict on charges that a young Dutch nanny shook a child so forcefully he died.

The nine-woman, three-man panel deadlocked after nearly seven hours of deliberations.

Anna-Corina Peeze, 19, of Amsterdam is charged with involuntary manslaughter in the death of 8-week-old Brenton Scott Devonshire.

Loudoun County Circuit Judge Thomas D. Horne scheduled a new trial for April 20. Deputy Commonwealth's Attorney Barbara Walker said she would prosecute Peeze on the same charge.

Walker said Peeze violently shook the child when he would not stop crying Aug. 2. Doctors said the shaking slammed the baby's brain into his skull, and he died in a hospital four days later.

But in closing arguments Friday, defense attorney Rodney G. Leffler told the jury there is no evidence Peeze harmed the child. He said he doesn't dispute the cause of Brenton's death, but said there is reasonable doubt that Peeze committed the act.

``She had to get crazed, shake this baby to death, then recede to a happy, normal self when the father got home,'' Leffler said. ``Severe as these injuries are, they would have manifested themselves immediately.''

Peeze has pleaded innocent. She could face 10 years in prison if convicted.

According to testimony, the only other person alone with Brenton the day of the shaking was his father, Stephen Devonshire. He testified that he was briefly alone with the baby that evening when his wife, Sharon, and Peeze went shopping. He denies shaking the baby.

Walker said the evidence was circumstantial, but that Peeze was the only person with the infant during the afternoon when the shaking likely occurred. Doctors have been unable to pinpoint a specific time of day the baby was shaken.

Doctors said the baby's brain rammed his skull at 30 to 60 times the normal force of gravity. Fighter pilots pass out at 6 1/2 times the force of gravity, they said.

Leffler challenged the Devonshires about why they did not take the infant to a hospital sooner. The couple said they thought their son was sleeping until several hours after they returned when Stephen Devonshire found the baby was clammy and unresponsive. ILLUSTRATION: ASSOCIATED PRESS PHOTOS

Stephen and Sharon Devonshire leave Loudoun County Courthouse Friday

during a break in the nanny trial.

Anna-Corina Peeze, 19, of Amsterdam, is charged with involuntary

manslaughter. by CNB