The Joplin Globe, Joplin, MO

Local News

March 24, 2008

Dead baby found in girl's closet

By Jeff Lehr

jlehr@joplinglobe.com

SELIGMAN, Mo. — Barry County authorities Monday were trying to figure out what caused the death of an apparent newborn baby they found in the bedroom closet of a 16-year-old Seligman girl.

Sheriff Mick Epperly said the girl was taken by ambulance to a hospital in Bentonville, Ark., and admitted for a reported miscarriage after first being taken Thursday night to the hospital in Cassville by her mother.

The Barry County Sheriff’s Department was contacted Friday morning about the matter by Bentonville police after an attending doctor reported that the girl may have given live birth to a child, Epperly said. Hours later, sheriff’s investigators found a baby girl in a plastic shopping bag inside the girl’s bedroom closet at her family’s mobile home on the edge of Seligman, the sheriff said.

The infant, estimated as being almost a full-term baby, was dead. Investigators found blood on the wall of the girl’s bedroom and bloody towels in the home, the sheriff said.

He said an autopsy was conducted Saturday, and that the pathologist does not believe the baby was stillborn.

“We still don’t know what caused the death at this point,” Epperly said in a telephone interview Monday afternoon. “But (the autopsy) did show that there was some air in the lungs and that the child had taken some breaths.”

The sheriff said the baby’s body did not show any apparent signs of blunt-force trauma, strangulation or smothering.

He said the girl, who underwent surgery at the Bentonville hospital for hemorrhaging, had yet to be interviewed by sheriff’s investigators on Monday. He said they are hoping to talk with her, her mother and a former boyfriend as the investigation proceeds.

Juvenile authorities were contacted Friday about the matter because of the girl’s age, and an attorney was appointed to represent her, Epperly said. He said the girl was expected to meet with her attorney Monday afternoon, and that investigators might be able to talk to her after that.

Epperly said investigators believe the girl was home alone when she gave birth or had a miscarriage.

The sheriff said it took investigators some time Friday morning to determine where the girl lived in the Seligman area. He said that once they learned in which subdivision her family lived, they found no one there and the home padlocked.

Deputies later obtained permission from the teen’s mother by telephone to enter the residence and search for the baby, Epperly said. The girl’s 18-year-old sister met them at the residence about 11 a.m. and let them in, he said.

Investigators learned that the sister had come home about 4 p.m. Thursday, and discovered blood in the hallway and bathroom of the trailer home, the sheriff said. She helped her younger sister clean up most of the blood, he said.

“(The sister) thought she was having a miscarriage at that time,” he said.

When the teen’s mother came home from work about 6:30 p.m., she took her daughter to the hospital in Cassville, he said.

While deputies were searching the home, the 16-year-old girl’s mother recontacted them by phone and said her daughter had revealed to her that the baby was in the closet, Epperly said. But the girl had yet to indicate by Monday whether she believed she had given live birth to the child, he said.

Text Only
Local News
  • Dog helps some get through the court process

    Sophie, a mutt of a dog with draping ears and dotted brows, is helping people in St. Louis County court tell stories of crime to judges, investigators and attorneys.

    May 29, 2012

  • Jasper County 911 administrative lines down

    Though all Jasper County emergency 911 telephone lines are functional, administrative and non-emergency lines for the county dispatching service have been down since Monday night.

    May 29, 2012

  • Study suggests continued population drop in Kansas

    A decades-long decline in population is likely to continue in Kansas, particularly in the west of the state, and four counties could have fewer than 1,000 residents by 2040, according to a study by Wichita State University’s Center for Economic Development and Business Research.

    May 29, 2012

  • 052312 Lindquist3_72.jpg Tornado victim’s recovery ‘miraculous’

    Carolyn Mckinlay did not know much about baseball, but she knew it was important to watch the sixth game of last year’s World Series. It was important because her future husband, Mark Lindquist, had a ticket to see his beloved Cardinals take on the Texas Rangers in the seventh game at St. Louis.

    May 28, 2012 1 Photo

  • r052812memday2.jpg Family of service honored at Memorial Day ceremony

    Lt. Col. Robert Brock returned to his hometown Monday and told an audience of about 500 residents and veterans gathered at the Pittsburg State University Veterans Memorial that Memorial Day is a celebration of family — America’s family of service.

    May 28, 2012 2 Photos

  • Master developer working on project possibilities

    A Texas developer who Joplin officials intend to hire to help with the city’s post-tornado development says he has secured commitments for about $400 million in capital to fund about 20 possible projects.

    May 28, 2012

  • Webb City High School honored in rankings of national magazine

    Webb City High School is among 13 schools in Missouri to receive a silver medal designation among the best high schools as ranked by U.S. News & World Report.

    May 28, 2012

  • Grant to fund animal isolation area at Carthage Humane Society shelter

    The Carthage Humane Society will use a grant from the Carthage Community Foundation to complete a room for isolating potentially sick animals at the shelter, according to Glenda Erwin, shelter director.

    May 28, 2012

  • Mike Pound: Out-of-town adventures: texting while shopping

    My wife sent me a text the other day. She and our 14-year-old daughter, Emma, were shopping. I was not. I was doing the exact opposite of shopping. I was watching a baseball game on TV.

    May 28, 2012

  • Joplin summer school starts next week

    Students in the Joplin School District will have had only two weeks between the close of the school year and the start of summer school. Summer classes will be held weekdays from June 4 through June 29.

    May 28, 2012