A grand jury has charged a Georgia mom with child cruelty after she allegedly sat on her toddler's head for an hour to teach him a lesson in 'submission.'

The indictment was handed up on March 23, more than nine months after Kennesaw, Georgia's Susan Elizabeth Kelley was originally arrested for supposedly sitting on her son's head while trying to discipline him, reports the The Atlanta Journal-Constitution.

According to the arrest warrant, obtained by Fox 5, Kelley committed the offense of cruelty to a child in the first degree, stemming from the incident which allegedly occurred on the morning of May 11.

Susan Elizabeth Kelley of Kennesaw, Georgia has been indicted on a child cruelty charge after she allegedly wedged her toddler's head against a wooden chair and sat on it for an hour

Kelley, as stated in the arrest warrant, 'did place the head of her two-year-old son on the seat portion of a wooden dining room chair with a towel placed under the child’s head.'

She then apparently sat on her son's head, 'with full body weight,' for just over an hour in an effort to 'gain "submission" from the child.'

After being sat on, the toddler became unresponsive and was taken to Egleston Hospital for children in Atlanta, Georgia. His reported physical injuries included 'redness to the head, chest and back,' according to the warrant.

Kelley's lawyer, Maddox Kilgore, said that he would be entering a not guilty plea whenever she has her arraignment hearing.

The Cobb County, Georgia arrest warrant revealing Kelley's alleged actions on May 11

Egleston Hospital for children in Atlanta, Georgia, where the unresponsive toddler was taken

Kilgore noted that the toddler has since made a full recovery from the May 11 event that led to her arrest and subsequent release on a $55,220 bond.

If found guilty of cruelty to a child in the first degree — a felony offense — Kelley could face jail time of between five to 20 years, according to Georgia law.

Kilgore previously represented another Cobb County resident, Justin Ross Harris, during his 2016 trial in which he was found guilty of murdering his 22-month-old son after locking him in a hot car for seven hours.