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“Lisa Was
So Full of Life” New York Post, November 4, 1987. (Mark
Gado) |
Lisa was born on May 14, 1981, at Beekman
Downtown Hospital in lower Manhattan. She was the daughter of Michele
Launders, 19, and a 20-year-old college student unable to provide
financial support. Opposed to having an abortion, Michele visited a
physician sympathetic to her plight. He made arrangements for the baby
to be adopted. Through the doctor, Michele met Joel Steinberg,
introduced to her as a lawyer who handled many adoptions. |
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Steinberg told Michele that he would do his best
to find a suitable couple for her baby and assured her that the child
would have a good life, better than any she could ever hope to
provide. This was important to Michele because even though she had
chosen to relinquish her baby, she wanted the child to have a
comfortable life. When the baby was born, Joel Steinberg had Michele
signed some documents. That was the last day Michele saw her baby
alive.
But Steinberg simply took the baby home and kept
her. No legal adoption was arranged. She grew up with Steinberg as her
father and Hedda Nussbaum as her mother. Some law enforcement
officials speculated that Steinberg avoided the usual adoption
procedures because he wanted to bypass the legally mandated in-house
visit after a child has been adopted. A legal adoption would also have
required an inquiry into his domestic life – including an interview
with Hedda Nussbaum. Meanwhile, Michele was told that a well-to-do
attorney on Manhattan’s Upper East Side had become the adoptive
parent. She went on with her life, convinced that Lisa had a safe and
wonderful future.
Lisa attended New York City Public School 41.
Teachers remembered her well. She had a way with adults that did not
go unnoticed. “She was the most wonderful, loving creature, who could
talk to you like an adult, which was an extraordinary gift,” said a
family friend.
It is unclear when the abuse of Lisa began. Some
tenants at 14 W. 10th Street claimed they called the police many times
to report Steinberg’s suspected abuse of Hedda. But the child abuse
allegations seem not to have begun until about 1983 when one of
Hedda’s colleagues called a hot line to report suspected abuse of
Lisa. Another tenant called the hot line because she felt that if
Hedda was being beaten, Lisa was also in jeopardy. Suzanne Trazoff of
the Human Resources Administration told a reporter that the complaints
were investigated in 1984 – which included a visit to the Steinberg
residence -- but no signs of child abuse were found.
Teachers at P.S. 41, where Lisa attended the
first grade, did see a few bruises on her face. When Elliot Koreman,
the school principal, asked about the injuries, Steinberg and Nussbaum
said that Lisa was struck by her 16-month-old brother, Mitchell.
“Don’t you think we’ve tortured ourselves asking if she exhibited
anything in school?” Koreman later told reporters. “Things like this
happen,” he said, “We have no foolproof method of detecting them.
We’re doing the best we can.” But inside her home, Lisa must have been
suffering terribly.
Doctors and nurses at St. Vincent’s were
appalled when they examined Lisa on the morning of November 2, 1987.
She had cuts on both of her arms, legs, abdomen, stomach and head. Her
feet and ankles were covered with a crust of black dirt and grime.
Lisa’s long, once-beautiful hair was a twisted, matted mess and had
not been washed for quite some time. Under her tangled mane, doctors
discovered a severe, fresh bruise on her forehead. When they turned
Lisa over on her belly, they found one large, unusual bruise near the
center of her lower back. Her upper back was covered with both old and
new bruises, red, black, and blue in color. Both calves had
yellowish-brown marks, apparently from old injuries. She had bruising
and trauma marks on her buttocks. How precisely she obtained these
injuries remained unclear since Lisa never regained consciousness. Her
brain was hemorrhaging and she was already near death.
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| Lisa Steinberg holding baby
Mitchell |
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Lisa had been prone on the bathroom floor for
hours, unattended, while Joel Steinberg, fully aware that she was
injured, went out to meet friends. Hedda stayed home alone with
Mitchell, the 18-month-old baby, and waited. Never did she lift up the
telephone to call for an ambulance, a friend, a neighbor, or anyone
else. “Joel said he would take care of her, he would get her up when
he got back,” Hedda later told the court through her tears, “and I
didn’t want to show disloyalty or distrust to him, so I didn’t call.”
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