Prosecutors: 2-month-old Aliya Acosta was shaken to death by her 18-year-old father, who also tried to kill her mother

By ANDY GRIMM
Chicago Sun-Times

Christopher Villegas | Cook County Sheriff's Dept.

Christopher Villegas | Cook County Sheriff’s Dept.


A Humboldt Park man admitted to shaking his infant daughter Aliya Acosta so hard at their Humboldt Park home, it killed the 2-month-old, according to Cook County prosecutors.

And days after Aliya died, 18-year-old Christopher Villegas allegedly tried to strangle the child’s mother.

Villegas was ordered held without bond Thursday on a charge of first-degree murder for Aliya, who died Feb. 9 after three weeks on life support at Lurie Children’s Hospital.

The child’s mother left Aliya alone with Villegas for several hours on Jan. 17, when she heard the baby “cry out in a strange way” from her father’s bedroom, Assistant State’s Attorney Craig Taczy said at the bond hearing.

Aliya Acosta | Facebook

Aliya Acosta | Facebook

The woman went to the bedroom and found the baby on the bed struggling to breathe, Taczy said.

She and Villegas took the child to St. Mary’s Hospital, where doctors noted the baby’s skin was gray, her pulse was weak, and the child was unable to breathe.

Aliya was transferred to Lurie, where she was diagnosed with bleeding inside her skull, low blood flow to the brain, and fractured ribs. The family decided to turn off life support on Feb. 9, and the child died.

An autopsy ruled the baby died of multiple injuries from child abuse, and ruled her death a homicide.

Five days later, Villegas allegedly got into an argument with the girl’s mother, shoved her onto a couch and began choking her.

She struggled free, but Villegas hit her and threw her down onto the couch again, choking her with both hands, Taczy said.

Villegas, who knew the woman was pregnant when he attacked her, was arrested and charged with aggravated domestic battery, but was released on electronic monitoring.

In February, detectives investigating the domestic battery case also questioned him about the death of his daughter.

Villegas admitted he “shook the baby too hard,” and that the infant’s “eyes became glazed before the (baby) began throwing up,” Taczy said.

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