A Dallas County jury has handed down a staggering $1.1 billion verdict to a young child and his family after finding the boy’s stepfather responsible for a brutal beating that left the child catastrophically injured. The boy, now 7, is severely disabled, relies on a breathing machine and will need 24‑hour medical care for the rest of his life, according to court filings and the family’s lawyers. The civil award comes on the heels of criminal proceedings that ended with the stepfather’s conviction and a lengthy prison sentence.
Verdict Details and the Child’s Injuries
According to the lawsuit, in 2021 Madison Ball left her then‑2‑year‑old son in the care of her husband, Charles Brooks Jr. The complaint alleges Brooks beat the toddler, then repeatedly lied about what happened until the child was rushed to the hospital with a severe brain bleed. Court filings say the boy spent months in the ICU in a medically induced coma, suffered adult bite marks, sustained multiple organ and neurological damage, and now lives with permanent, severe brain damage.
Jurors awarded roughly $291 million in compensatory damages and about $810 million in punitive damages. Court records show Brooks was arrested 11 days after the incident, later fled, then pleaded guilty to injury to a child in 2023 and received a 40‑year prison sentence, according to CBS News Texas.
Lawyer’s Message and Family’s Focus
The family’s lawyer, plaintiffs’ attorney Tony Buzbee, framed the verdict as both a warning and a statement of values. In a statement, he said, “Children are a precious gift from God our Father. Don’t mess with Texas children. Period.” The lawsuit describes Brooks as an unemployed trust‑fund beneficiary and links his family to early investors in Humble Oil, a detail the plaintiffs emphasized in court filings as they argued for massive punitive damages.
While the verdict closes the trial, it opens the door to a new phase filled with appeals, motions and fights over what can actually be collected, as reported by CBS News Texas. For the family, lawyers say the focus is on securing resources for the child’s lifetime of medical and daily care needs and on formally holding Brooks accountable…