Homicides Involving
The Theft of a Fetus
From a Pregnant Victim
©2006 Vernon J. Geberth, Practical
Homicide Investigation
Reprint: Law and Order, Vol. 54, No. 3, March,
2006
Article Expanded for Research
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INTRODUCTION
Murders of pregnant
women for their unborn babies are brutal and savage crimes. The offender
literally cuts the fetus from the victim mother's womb in a bizarre replication
of a cesarean section procedure. This type of homicide is statistically rare,
but not without precedent. In an article published in 2002 by the American
Academy of Forensic Sciences entitled, "Newborn Kidnapping by Cesarean Section"
authored by Burgess, the author presented six cases as reference in the
clinical identification of a new category of personal cause homicide for The
Crime Classification Manual.
I conducted a separate study that would
relate to law enforcement considerations in these type cases. As of 2005, the
research established seven documented cases of homicide in which the
offender(s) killed a pregnant woman, described as a victim mother, for the
purpose of obtaining the victim mother's fetus. Also found were two
Attempt Theft of Fetus cases for a total of nine incidents. Table #1
lists the nine cases referred to in this article. The author provides a brief
synopsis on each case to demonstrate the similarities as well as the
dissimilarities.
The author prefers not to use the clinical term
cesarean section since it connotes a medical procedure as opposed to the
depravity and evil demonstrated by offenders who kill a victim mother for her
unborn child. A cesarean section is a surgical procedure in which the
abdomen and uterus are incised and a baby is delivered transabdominally
(1).
The procedure is normally performed when conditions exist where a
vaginal delivery might be hazardous to the mother and/or infant. The well being
of both mother and child are taken into consideration during a cesarean
section. Obviously, an offender who commits such a reprehensible crime is not
concerned about the victim mother. According to Cathy Nahirny, Administrative
Manager at the National Center for Missing and Exploited Children, "Cesarean
kidnappings represent a small fraction of the 232 infant abductions by
non-family members since 1983 according to the center's records." (2) Ms.
Nahirny provided the author with a listing entitled "Infant Abductions Where
Infant Cut From Mother's Womb," which listed seven homicides and one theft of
an infant after birth.
According to the National Center of Missing
and Exploited Children there have been nine attacks on pregnant women since
1987. There have been at least three assaults on an expectant mother for her
child since 2003. Seven of the nine pregnant women were murdered during the
attack. Seven of the nine babies survived. (3)
| Case # | PERPETRATOR | VICTIM | DATE | CITY AND STATE |
| 1 | DARCIE PIERCE, WF 19 | CINDY RAY | 7/23/1987 | Albuquerque, NM |
| 2 | JACQUELINE WILLIAMS BF 28 | DEBORAH EVANS WF 28 | 11/16/1995 | Addison, Illinois DuPage County |
| 2 | FEDELL CAFFEY BM 22 Co-Conspirator |
EVANS | 11/16/1995 | Addison, Illinois |
| 2 | LAVERN WARD BM 24 Co-Conspirator |
EVANS | 11/16/1995 | Addison, Illinois |
| 3 | FELICIA SCOTT BF 29 | CARENTHIA CURRY BF 17 | 1/31/1996 | Tuscaloosa, Alabama |
| 4 | JOSEPHINA SALDANA FH 40 | MARGARTIA FLORES FH 40 | 9/14/1998 | Fresno, California |
| 5 | MICHELLE BICA WF 39 | TERESA ANDREWS WF 23 | 2/27/2000 | Ravenna, Ohio |
| 6 | EFFIE GOODSON WF 37 | CAROLYN SIMPSON WF 21 | 12/22/2003 | Okemah, Oklahoma |
| 7 | LISA MONTGOMERY WF 36 | BOBBIE JO STINNETT WF 23 | 12/16/2004 | Skidmore, Missouri |
| 8 | KATIE SMITH WF 22 Killed by the victim mother |
SARAH BRADY WF 26 | 2/10/2005 | Ft. Mitchell, Kentucky |
| 9 | PEGGY JO CONNER WF 38 Killed by the victim mother |
VALERIE OSKIN WF 30 | 10/12/2005 | Kittanning, Pennsylvania |
Case #1
In a New Mexico case, the married offender
named Darcie Pierce approached an eight months pregnant woman as she left a
prenatal clinic at Kirkland Air Force Base. The offender threatened the victim
with a toy gun, forced her into a car, and drove to her home where she had
surgical instruments and medical books. However, the suspect's husband was at
the house.
The offender then drove the victim to an isolated location
where she strangled the mother into unconsciousness. She tied the victim to a
tree and cut open the victim's abdomen with her car keys and delivered a baby
girl. She left the victim to bleed to death. Pierce was arrested after she
reported that she had delivered a baby. She was taken to a local hospital where
an examination revealed that she had not delivered a baby and authorities were
notified.
Case #2
In an Illinois case, three perpetrators
identified as Jacqueline Williams, her boyfriend Fedell Caffey and her cousin
Lavern Ward, went to the victim's apartment. The victim mother was the
ex-girlfriend of one of the abductors and she already had a child by him. The
victim mother was both shot and stabbed and a crude caesarean section was
performed. Although the older child was originally spared when his mother was
killed in their apartment, his abductors decided he knew too much and had to
die. He was stabbed to death and then dumped 10 miles from the scene of the
original crime. People from the community identified those responsible. The
baby was recovered alive and well.
Case #3
In an Alabama
case, the perpetrator named Felcia Scott and victim mother were friends. They
had plans to go out to dinner, when the mother was abducted. When she did not
return home by the next day, the family reported her as missing. The abductor
returned home in the early morning hours the next day. She told her husband
that she had had her baby and needed to go to Birmingham to see her doctor.
Three months later, the victim mother's body was located at the bottom of a
50-foot ravine approximately 60 miles northwest of Tuscaloosa (near
Birmingham), stuffed into a plastic garbage can sealed with duct tape. The
victim mother's abdomen had been sliced open and she had been shot repeatedly
in the head.
Case #4
In a California case, the perpetrator
named Josephina Saldana abducted the victim mother from her home. She had
called the victim mother a few days earlier and offered her family gifts of
free baby furniture and a one-year supply of diapers. The woman went to the
victim's on the day of the abduction and told the victim mother that they
needed to go to the warehouse to collect the gifts. The victim mother was eight
months pregnant. When the victim mother did not return, the family called the
police. The next day, the perp showed up at Valley Children's Hospital with a
dead fetus. She claimed she had given birth to the child in her car. She was
subsequently arrested and found guilty. While in prison she hung
herself.
Case #5
In an Ohio case, the perpetrator named
Michelle Bica, and her husband had casually met the victim mother and her
husband while the two couples were shopping. They exchanged home addresses.
Michelle Bica, who was faking her pregnancy, began stalking the victim. She
called the victim mother and made an appointment to see a car she was selling.
Bica conned the pregnant mother to leave her home and accompany her back to her
residence, where the mother was shot and killed. Her fetus was removed. When
the victim mother's husband discovered his wife was not home, the car was
missing and the house was unlocked, he called the police and filed a missing
person report. The police located the vehicle a few blocks away. Investigators
checked phone records to determine who had called the family that day and
conducted interviews. Bica had an alibi, which quickly fell apart. When the
police returned the second time, Bica had committed suicide.
Case
#6
In an Oklahoma case, the perpetrator, Effie Goodsen, was a patron
of the casino where the victim mother was employed. Video cameras at the casino
captured the image of the victim mother and the suspect departing the building.
The abductor offered to give the victim mother a ride home and also provide her
with some baby clothes since the offender was expecting a baby boy. The
victim's husband reported her missing. The next day, Goodsen arrived at
Holdenville General Hospital with a very small, unresponsive infant. Staff
determined that the three month premature infant was deceased. An exam of the
alleged mother proved that she had not recently delivered a baby and law
enforcement was notified. Hunters found the victim's body a few days later in a
ditch about two miles from where the abductor used to live. The victim mother
had been shot in the head and her abdomen had been cut open. Goodsen was found
incompetent to stand trial.
Case #7
In a Missouri case,
the perpetrator named Lisa Montgomery and victim mother were casual
acquaintances. The victim mother was 8 months pregnant at the time of the
incident. She and her husband bred rat terrier dogs and had a website.
Montgomery had contacted the victim mother using a fake name and requested
directions to the residence under the guise of buying a dog. The victim's
mother arrived at her daughter's home about 1 hour later and found the victim
mother lying in a pool of blood, the fetus cut from her womb.
Multiple
law enforcement agencies worked on the case and the victim's computer was
carefully examined. Investigators were able to trace some e-mail communications
the victim had with the abductor. Montgomery eventually confessed to strangling
the victim mother and cutting the baby from her womb. The abductor and victim
mother were casual acquaintances and both attended the same dog show in April
2004, in Abilene, TX. (4)(5)(6)
Case #8: ATTEMPT THEFT OF
FETUS - OFFENDER KILLED BY VICTIM MOTHER
In a Kentucky case, the
perpetrator named Katie Smith lured the victim mother to her apartment on the
pretense of giving her a baby present from Babies R Us registry online, a gift
that had been mistakenly delivered to the Smith's residence in Ft. Mitchell.
Smith's apartment was outfitted with surgical tools and a fully stocked
nursery. Smith attacked the victim mother in an attempt to extract her unborn
child by cesarean section. However, the woman fought back and fatally stabbed
her attacker. (7)(8)
Case #9: ATTEMPT THEFT OF FETUS -
OFFENDER ARRESTED
In a Pennsylvania case, the perpetrator named
Peggy Jo Conner who purported to be pregnant bashed her eight-month pregnant
neighbor over the head with a baseball bat. She then put the badly beaten
mother in her car and drove the victim 15 miles to a remote wooded area. The
victim had been cut across her abdomen over an old caesarean scar with a razor
knife. A teenager who came upon the scene saw Conner kneeling next to the
pregnant victim who was lying on the ground. The teen informed his father and
the police were called. Investigators found a bassinet, a baby swing and other
baby related items in Conner's trailer home. Conner had convinced her live-in
partner that she was pregnant even showing him a sonogram.
(9)(10)
INVESTIGATIVE ASSESSMENT AND ANALYSIS
THE OFFENDER
PROFILES
In each of the seven (7) homicides as well as the (2)
attempts (Case#8 and #9), the primary offender was a female 19 to 40 years of
age acting alone. The exception was Case#2 Jacqueline Williams, who was
accompanied by her boyfriend and male cousin, who assisted in the murders.
All of the offenders had faked their pregnancies convincing family and
friends that they were about to give birth. Four of the women were unable to
conceive, two offenders had hysterectomies and one offender had a tubaligation.
The offenders, who had put on weight, had dressed in maternity clothing. Some
of the offenders had made preparations for their "newborn" including setting up
nurseries, visiting the hospital, and showing "their" sonograms.
The
offenders had pre-selected and stalked their victims. Stalking incidents
indicate obsessions on the part of the offenders, which is manifested through a
persistent and intense preoccupation with the victim or target. Historically,
stalkers are usually male offenders known to the victim and in most instances,
involve former lovers, boyfriends or spouses. However, it should be noted that
there are also stalkers, who are complete strangers to the target. These
stalkers can be men or women. In cases such as these the stalker is
invariably a woman with a fixation on obtaining the victim mother's baby.
In some cases they met the victim mother through casual introduction,
engaging the victim by befriending them or offering advice assistance and/or
gifts. The offenders were able to manipulate their victims by conning them
until they were ready to attack. The exception was Darcie Pierce, who was
desperate and overdue" in her faked pregnancy. She confronted her victim at
gunpoint (fake gun) to abduct her and steal the fetus. Although she had
surgical instruments at home, she couldn't bring the victim mother there
because her husband was at home. She used her car keys to open the victim
mother's abdomen to extract the fetus.
Four of the seven homicide
offenders went to their respective victim's homes to initiate the homicide. Two
of the offenders took the victim mother to an isolated location. In Case#5 the
offender was able to con the victim mother back to the offender's home to be
killed. In Case#8, the offender was able to con the victim back to the
offender's residence where she had the surgical tools ready to extract the
woman's fetus. In Case#9 the offender went to the victim's trailer home. Six of
the seven homicide victim mothers were killed before the fetus was cut from the
womb. One victim was left to bleed to death. The women and their babies
survived in the two attempt fetus theft Cases #8 &
#9.
Offender Motive
In the nine cases that the
author reviewed, the primary motivation underlying these murderous acts were to
sustain a relationship with a male partner by providing them with a child.
Seven of the women had convinced their significant others that they were
pregnant. In Case#4 the motive is not clear. In Case#8 (Attempt) it appears
that the offender was just obsessed with becoming a mother. The offender did
not have a significant male in her life. She had convinced family, friends and
co-workers that she was about to give birth. She carried around a book filled
with snapshots of her looking pregnant. She had a nursery stocked with baby
items and a hospital bag packed and ready as if she were about to deliver a
child.
According to Burgess, et al. another motivation is to fulfill a
childbearing and delivery fantasy. "The female abductors, is essence, become a
mother by proxy by acting out a fantasy of them delivering a baby." (11)
Burgess et al. present that the abductors in their six-case study, "decided to
do something physical to get the baby." (12)
From an investigative
standpoint, this suggests that the motivation involves some significant
planning and preparation. The cases that the author has cited herein clearly
represent organized and criminal behavior. The psychopathology of these
offenders may very well encompass some form of delusional thinking but not to
the point of insanity. The women offenders in this study were fully conscious
of their actions and intentions. They chose to kill the victim mother for her
unborn child to fulfill a narcissistic need. The offenders then disposed of
the victim mother to effectively cover-up their crime and avoid detection.
In the opinion of the author, this psychopathology is more consistent with
psychopathy than psychosis.
Investigative
Strategies
ABDUCTION
Police Response
The
initial police response to "Report of a Missing Pregnant Woman" must
include immediate notification to detectives and a broadcast of the victim
mother description. Research on this type of offense indicates that the
offender will most likely accomplish this crime within less than two hours of
the abduction. In fact, the author recommends an Amber alert type response,
which will actively inform the media and the community of this
event.
Detective Response
Detectives should
immediately begin a neighborhood canvass to ascertain whether or not the victim
mother had been seen in the company of another pregnant woman. In most of these
cases, the offender has initiated some sort of casual relationship with her
potential target. It is not unlikely that the offender has visited with or
interacted with the victim mother on prior occasions. Attempt to obtain
assistance from federal authorities early on in the investigation.
The
canvass may provide the investigators with offender descriptions, license plate
numbers and other identification information.
Additional
Information
The value of transmitting this information in an Amber
Alert format is that people who may have had suspicions about a friend or
neighbor who purported to be pregnant and wouldn't think of notifying the
police might now have a different frame of reference. In the cases that the
author reviewed, there was always someone (usually another woman) who had
expressed doubt about the offender's alleged pregnancy or the sudden appearance
of a newborn. Interviews with investigators who had been involved with these
type cases validated this assumption.
In five of the murder cases,
(Case# 1-3-4-5-6) the offenders disposed of or hid the body of the victim
mother. In two cases (Case# 2-7) the body was left at the scene. In three cases
where the body was disposed or hidden the offenders showed up at a hospital.
Two offenders (Cases# 4 & 6) arrived with the dead fetuses claiming to have
given birth. The other offender (Case# 1) showed up at the hospital with a live
baby for assessment.
Subsequent hospital examination revealed that the
offender women had not given birth. Authorities were notified and the offenders
were arrested. The live child was properly identified through DNA and returned
to the biological father. The bodies of the three victims were recovered during
the criminal investigation.
Two of the offenders (Case# 3-5) continued
the charade until police investigators caught up with them. Offender Scott
managed to elude authorities for eight days as she presented the baby as her
own. She was arrested and the baby was returned to the victim mother's family.
Offender Bica "played" mother for five days, during which time she showed off
her new baby to friends and neighbors. Bica shot herself when the authorities
came to her residence to arrest her. The newborn was reunited with the
biological father after DNA testing.
Conclusion
These
crimes are unimaginably evil. They devastate the surviving families of the
victim mother and horrify the general public. In my opinion, the infants that
do survive such a traumatic birth are truly miracle babies. However, these
cases are not without precedent. There are unique behavioral profiles to these
offenders. I have provided herein examples of their motivations, manipulations,
and preparation for their crimes, including victim selection and modus operandi
to serve as a "Frame of Reference" in the investigation of these type
incidents.
Vernon J. Geberth, M.S., M.P.S. author of the New and
Completely Revised textbook, Practical Homicide Investigation: Tactics,
Procedures, and Forensic Techniques, FOURTH EDITION, 2006. For further
information on Theft of Fetus see Chapter 20 in the textbook.
(1) Mosby's Medical & Nursing Dictionary. 2nd ed.
St. Louis The C.V. Mosby Company, 1986, page 217.
(2) Telephone Interview
April 19, 2005
(3) USA Today. Richard Willing Reporter, "Bizarre Cesarean
Kidnappings of unborn babies increase."
(4) New York Post, December 19,
2004, p 5
(5) Ibid, December 20, 2004, p.5
(6) New York Times, "Baby
Found in Kansas Thoughjt to be that of Slain Woman," Stephen Kinzer, December
18, 2004.
(7) USA Today, "Bizarre Cesarean Kidnapping of unborn babies
increase." Richard Willing, April 15, 2005.
(8) The Cincinnati Enquirer,
"Attacker 'obsessed with becoming mom' Jim Hannah, February 13, 2005
(9) New
York Post, October 14, 2005, page 17
(10) CBS News October 13 and 14,
2005.
(11) Burgess, Ann W.R.N., D.N.S., Baker, Timothy, Ph D. Nahirny, Cathy
and Rabun Jr., John ACSW "Newborn Kidnapping by Cesarean Section." Journal of
Forensic Science, July, 2002 Vol. 47, No.4
(12) Ibid.
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