Philadelphia

Mystery Grows Around Deaths of Infants Found in Vacant Philadelphia Lot

The mystery surrounding the deaths of two newborns whose bodies were found in a vacant North Philadelphia lot grew on Sunday when police discovered injuries that revealed the infants may have undergone autopsies before they were dumped.

Police continued to investigate the deaths of the baby boy and girl on Monday. Investigators were searching for a black pickup truck they said was spotted dumping trash in the area where the babies were found. Detectives canvassed the neighborhood, searching for surveillance video that may reveal how the babies wound up in the lot.

Mutter and Montgomery Dead babies
Google Earth
Police are investigating after they say two newborn babies were found dead in a grassy lot on Mutter Street in North Philadelphia.

Police said 9-year-old Kasime Crawford and another child found the dead infants Saturday night lying in a patch of grass next to a used-car lot on Mutter Street near Montgomery Avenue. Crawford told NBC10 he thought they were toys at first.

"Both of their faces were blue," Crawford said. "There's a doll baby. That's when it started stinking and that's when we checked and there was a baby. I went home and told my dad." 

Residents returned to the lot Sunday morning and found the bodies, then called police. Police said medics pronounced the babies dead at the lot at 10:31 a.m. Both infants had cuts on them, while one had a clamp attached to the umbilical cord, police said.

"They were just thrown away like trash," said Stephanie Farrell, who lives near where the babies were found.

Boy who found dead babies north phila USE
NBC10 - Pete Kane
The 9-year-old boy who found two newborn babies dead in a grassy lot in North Philadelphia stands with his father near the scene as police investigate the infants' deaths on Sunday, Nov. 15, 2015.

The medical examiner discovered that the bodies had possibly undergone autopsies at some point. Investigators have not yet determined how or when the babies died. They also have not yet determined how long they had been in the lot before they were found.

"You shouldn't throw little kids away," said Ronnie Jackson, Kasime's father. "You could've left them in the hospital, gave them to a charity, gave them to the fire department or knocked on my door and gave them to me." 

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