Autopsy inconclusive for fetus found in NYC bag
Send a link to a friend
[October 19, 2013]
NEW YORK
(AP) -- An autopsy of a fetus found in a teenage girl's shopping bag at a New York City lingerie store was inconclusive, and more tests will be needed to determine how the fetus died, the city medical examiner's office said Friday.
|
The needed tests could take a couple of weeks as police continue to look into the macabre case.
Preliminary reports from detectives suggest the fetus was born alive and possibly had been asphyxiated, but chief New York Police Department spokesman John McCarthy said that the case was still being investigated and that police were awaiting the medical examiners' determination of the cause of death.
The case began Thursday when a security guard stopped two 17-year-old girls to examine their bags at a Victoria's Secret store in midtown Manhattan. The guard found the dead fetus in one of the bags.
The girl who had been carrying the bag containing the fetus told detectives she had delivered a day earlier and didn't know what to do, authorities said. Police believe she delivered at the other girl's house.
Both girls were arrested on petit larceny charges. It was unclear whether either has a lawyer.
The girl believed to have given birth was taken to a hospital and remained there Friday. A woman who answered the phone at a possible home number for her said she knew nothing about the matter. A message left at another possible number wasn't immediately returned.
[to top of second column] |
A woman who said she was the other girl's mother said she hadn't spoken with her daughter since her arrest and hung up.
Zami Ford, a neighbor of the girl believed to have given birth, told the Daily News she was unaware of the teen's pregnancy and stunned by the allegations.
"She's a good girl," Ford told the newspaper. "I can't believe she would do that."
[Associated
Press; By JENNIFER PELTZ and COLLEEN LONG]
Associated Press writer
Jake Pearson contributed to this report.
Copyright 2013 The Associated
Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published,
broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
|