On Christmas Day 2025, in Fort Myers, Florida (Lee County), 36-year-old Krysten Ann Happel allegedly abused her extremely young daughter—verbally berating her, forcefully tapping/nudging her head repeatedly, and throwing a blanket over her face—while sending disturbing videos and texts to a friend. The texts targeted the child’s father with violent threats, including plans to “set [him] on fire and watch him f–ing burn to death” or kill him “with my bare hands.” Police were alerted by the friend, who had previously helped Happel with housing. Officers found Happel and the urine-soaked child at a Salvation Army branch; Happel was arrested after admitting to the acts in a Mirandized interview.
Key Evidence from Charging Documents
Fort Myers Police detailed the abuse in a probable cause statement:
- Videos: Showed Happel battering the child’s head (noting vulnerability of young cranial bones and brain), covering her face with a blanket (risking breathing), and yelling insults like “Get your ugly a— out of here” and “someone come get this demonized child that came from f–boy.”
- Texts: Explicit threats against the father, e.g., “Im gonna go and set [him] on fire… till i f–ing kill him with my bare hands and spend the rest of my life in prison ha ha ha ha ha.”
- Child’s Condition: Found soaked in urine, suggesting prolonged neglect.
- Happel’s Admissions: Confirmed sending materials and performing depicted actions.
The friend met Happel through her husband and had offered custody support, but Happel later got Salvation Army aid.
Legal Charges and Status
Happel faces one count of cruelty toward a child – child abuse without great bodily harm (Fla. Stat. § 827.03(2)(b)), a third-degree felony punishable by up to 5 years in prison. She’s also held on a Georgia fugitive warrant. Detained at Lee County Jail on $7,500 bond; court date January 26, 2026.
Florida child abuse laws emphasize protection for vulnerable infants/toddlers, where even non-severe physical acts (like head nudging) qualify if they cause unnecessary pain/suffering. Threats alone might not charge separately without action, but they bolster the abuse case by showing intent/mindset. No great bodily harm keeps it from harsher penalties, but neglect (unchanged diaper) could add counts.
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