Atlanta mom who killed her two toddler sons by cooking them in oven will spend rest of life behind bars

A sick Atlanta mother who slowly cooked her two toddler sons alive in an oven — and then sent their father harrowing footage of their bodies — has been sentenced to spend the rest of her life behind bars.

Lamora Williams “knowingly and intentionally” stuffed her two young boys, Ke’Younte Penn, 2, and Ja’Karter Williams,1, inside of an oven and turned it on in their home in October 2017, killing them both, according to police who found the dead boys severely burned.

The then-24-year-old single mom lied to a dispatcher, claiming to have come home to find her kids dead and their caregiver missing.

Lamora Williams was convicted of killing her two young sons in 2017. 11Alive

“When I came in, the stove was laying on my son, on my youngest son’s head, and my other son was laid out on the floor with his brains laid out on the floor,” Williams said in a chilling 911 call.

“Like, can you please tell me, like, I don’t want to get locked up because this is not my fault. I had just came home from work,” she continued, according to Law and Crime.

Williams also called the boys’ father, Jameel Penn, and showed him live video of the grisly crime scene — including the children lying lifeless on the floor. He frantically called 911 at roughly the same time as his children’s mother.

“It was like a real horror movie,” the dad told WSB-TV days after. “It was Friday the 13th.”

Williams had pleaded not guilty and maintained her innocence.

However, a jury on Friday found her guilty of 14 charges — including felony murder, cruelty to children and giving false statements — and she was sentenced to life in prison without the possibility of parole plus 35 years, according to Fox 5 Atlanta

Jameel Penn, the father of Ja’karter and Kyante, said after their death that he “lost his soul.” WSB-TV

Williams’ mother, Brenda Williams, had said that her daughter had a long history of mental illness and believed she “snapped” following her breakup with Penn. She was placed on suicide watch in custody.

Williams’s sister Tabitha Hollingsworth previously told WSB TV the children’s deaths were preventable.

Williams will spend the rest of her life in prison, a judge ruled Friday. Fulton County Sheriff’s Office

“This was something we saw that could possibly happen,” Hollingsworth said in 2017. “She’s had issues from a baby. Issues my mom tried to address with the state of Georgia.”

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