😢 DOCTORS FOUND OLD AND NEW BLEEDING INSIDE A 3-MONTH-OLD’S BRAIN—THE INVESTIGATION LED STRAIGHT TO HIS FATHER.

There are tragedies that leave communities grieving.

There are crimes that leave investigators searching for answers.

And then there are cases involving children so young, so completely dependent on the adults around them, that even experienced detectives struggle to comprehend what happened.

The case of three-month-old De’Aundre Martarez Brown Jr. was one of those cases.

Because when doctors first examined the tiny infant brought into a South Carolina hospital in September 2021, they quickly realized they were not dealing with a medical emergency caused by illness.

Something much darker had happened.

Something that would ultimately lead to a homicide conviction and a 35-year prison sentence.

But before the courtroom.

Before the trial.

Before the verdict.

There was only a baby fighting for his life.

On September 21, 2021, deputies in Greenville County received a call from a local hospital regarding a severely injured infant.

Medical staff were deeply concerned.

The child had arrived unresponsive.

The situation was critical.

Doctors immediately began examining the baby while emergency personnel worked desperately to stabilize him.

The infant was identified as three-month-old De’Aundre Martarez Brown Jr.

At an age when most babies are just beginning to recognize familiar faces, respond to voices, and smile at their parents, De’Aundre Jr. was instead lying in a hospital bed surrounded by doctors trying to understand the devastating injuries they were seeing.

Those injuries immediately raised alarm.

Medical examinations revealed retinal hemorrhages.

The tiny blood vessels inside the baby’s eyes had ruptured.

Doctors also discovered serious trauma inside his brain.

The injuries were extensive.

Severe.

And impossible to ignore.

As physicians continued evaluating the child, questions began emerging almost immediately.

How could a baby sustain injuries like these?

What exactly had happened before he arrived at the hospital?

And perhaps most importantly, who had been caring for him?

Investigators quickly learned that before being brought to the hospital, De’Aundre Jr. had been in the care of his biological father, De’Aundre Brown.

According to prosecutors, Brown had been watching the infant at a residence on Taylor Ridge Court.

At some point, Brown brought the baby to the hospital and reportedly told medical personnel that the child was unresponsive.

Initially, medical teams focused entirely on saving the baby’s life.

Detectives, meanwhile, began gathering information.

Every minute mattered.

Every statement mattered.

Every detail mattered.

Because the injuries doctors were observing did not appear consistent with an ordinary accident.

As De’Aundre Jr. remained hospitalized, loved ones hoped for a miracle.

Machines monitored his condition around the clock.

Doctors continued treatment.

Family members waited anxiously.

But the injuries were overwhelming.

Three days later, on September 24, 2021, the battle ended.

De’Aundre Martarez Brown Jr. died.

He had lived only three months.

Ninety days.

A life that had barely begun was suddenly over.

The Greenville County Coroner’s Office later determined the cause of death was blunt force trauma.

That ruling changed everything.

The case was no longer simply a medical investigation.

It became a homicide investigation.

Detectives now had a new mission.

They needed to determine exactly how such catastrophic injuries occurred and who was responsible.

As investigators worked alongside medical experts, the findings became increasingly disturbing.

Months later, during a preliminary hearing held in April 2022, an investigator testified about what doctors had discovered.

According to testimony, physicians found evidence of both old and new hemorrhaging inside the infant’s brain.

That detail immediately stood out.

This was not merely evidence of a single injury.

The findings suggested multiple episodes of trauma.

Doctors reportedly explained that injuries of this nature were rarely seen outside cases involving non-accidental abuse.

For investigators, that testimony became one of the most important pieces of evidence in the entire case.

Because babies do not cause these injuries to themselves.

A three-month-old child cannot create the force necessary to inflict such damage.

Someone else must be involved.

Authorities launched an extensive investigation.

Medical records were reviewed.

Witnesses were interviewed.

Timelines were reconstructed.

Every movement surrounding the child’s final days was examined.

As detectives pieced everything together, they reached a conclusion.

According to investigators, the injuries occurred while De’Aundre Jr. was under the care and custody of his father.

That conclusion eventually led prosecutors to file criminal charges.

Yet despite the seriousness of the allegations, one question remained unanswered throughout much of the case.

Why?

Why would something like this happen?

Why would a three-month-old baby suffer such devastating injuries?

Court records and prosecutors never publicly released a clear motive.

There were no elaborate financial schemes.

No complex conspiracies.

No dramatic explanations.

Only the heartbreaking reality that a baby was dead.

And investigators believed the person responsible was the very individual entrusted with protecting him.

As the legal process unfolded, years passed.

The case moved slowly through the justice system.

Evidence was presented.

Medical experts testified.

Investigators explained their findings.

Prosecutors argued that the evidence clearly showed child abuse had resulted in homicide.

Meanwhile, the memory of De’Aundre Jr. remained central to every proceeding.

A child who never learned to walk.

Never celebrated a first birthday.

Never spoke his first words.

Never had the opportunity to discover who he might become.

Those lost possibilities weighed heavily throughout the case.

For many people following the investigation, that was the hardest part.

Not simply how he died.

But everything he never had the chance to experience.

Finally, nearly five years after the infant’s death, the case reached its conclusion.

On June 12, 2026, a jury found De’Aundre Brown guilty of homicide by child abuse.

The verdict marked the end of a long legal battle.

But it could never undo what had happened.

It could never restore a life that had been lost.

Following the conviction, Brown was sentenced to 35 years in the South Carolina Department of Corrections.

The sentence reflected the seriousness of the crime and the devastating consequences that followed.

For prosecutors, it represented accountability.

For investigators, it represented the completion of years of work.

For the family members mourning De’Aundre Jr., however, no sentence could fully heal the wound left behind.

Because at the center of every court document, every hearing, every piece of evidence, and every legal argument was a baby.

A three-month-old child who relied entirely on the adults around him.

A child who should have known only comfort.

Only safety.

Only love.

Instead, his short life became the focus of a homicide investigation.

Today, the details of the case remain difficult to read.

The medical findings are heartbreaking.

The testimony is disturbing.

The outcome is tragic.

Yet the story of De’Aundre Martarez Brown Jr. serves as a painful reminder of why child abuse investigations matter.

Because children like De’Aundre cannot speak for themselves.

They cannot explain what happened.

They cannot ask for help.

They depend entirely on others to protect them.

And when that protection fails, the consequences can be devastating.

Three months.

That was all the time De’Aundre Jr. was given.

Three months that should have been filled with lullabies, family photographs, and dreams of the future.

Instead, they ended in a hospital room.

And years later, a courtroom would finally deliver justice for a child who never had the chance to tell his own story.

🕊️ Rest in peace, De’Aundre Martarez Brown Jr.