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Sugar Cookie

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Two infants were found dead in the Bronx on Monday, police said.

The babies, each believed to be less than a month old, were found behind a building in the Claremont section of the Bronx, around 2:40 p.m., police said.

One infant may have been stabbed and one may have been thrown from a roof, according to police. They were taken to an area hospital where they were pronounced dead, police said.

No arrests have been made.

The investigation began with a 911 calls, though police would not say who made it.

Authorities are investigating the deaths of two newborn boys who were found wrapped in brown paper on the patio of a Bronx building Monday afternoon, police officials say.

According to police, the superintendent of the multi-story building on College Avenue in the Concourse section found the baby boys, both thought to be only a week old, on the patio just before 2 p.m. Both babies were rushed to Bronx Lebanon Hospital where they were pronounced dead a short time later.

It wasn't clear who left them there or how they may have died. Police are looking for surveillance video in the area for potential lead.
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Two infants were found dead in the Bronx on Monday, police said.

The babies, each believed to be less than a month old, were found behind a building on College Avenue, near and East 172nd Street in the Claremont section of the borough, around 2:40 p.m., police said.

One infant may have been stabbed and one may have been thrown from a roof, according to police. They were taken to an area hospital where they were pronounced dead, police said.

No arrests have been made.

The investigation began with a 911 calls, though police would not say who made it.
 
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A Bronx superintendent described the moment he discovered a pair of dead twin newborns behind a building, as horrifying new details emerged in the case Tuesday.

Police sources said the baby boys were less than 24 hours old when they were found Monday afternoon roughly 20 feet apart near the six-story College Avenue building in Claremont.

One of the newborns was found partially covered in a pet training pad — with apparent head trauma and his umbilical cord wrapped around his neck — in a janitorial work area on the side of the building.

The other was discovered 20 feet away, bound in a black plastic bag with no visible injuries, in the back of the building, sources and the superintendent said.

The superintendent of the building made the disturbing discovery before police were called around 1:45 p.m.

The super, who would only identify himself as Johnny, told The Post on Tuesday that he came outside around 8 a.m. and thought he saw a doll on the ground.

“I didn’t pay it any mind, because I thought it was a toy doll,” he said, adding that he then went about his day.

In the afternoon, when he came back out to tend to the garbage, Johnny said he “realized it wasn’t a toy” but a baby boy.

The baby was partially wrapped from the waist up in blue plastic, you know the kind you keep in the house for animals,” the shaken super said, explaining that he touched the infant and found blood underneath.

“The blue thing [training pad] was wet. I turned it a little,” he said. “There was a little blood, but it did not soak through.”

Hopefully the mother bled out.
 
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Two newborn baby boys found dead outside a Bronx apartment building five months ago were beaten to death, the city medical examiner says — and police are increasing the reward for info on who killed them.

The boys, who weighed five and six pounds and are believed to be full-term identical twins, were discovered dead the afternoon of Nov. 9 by the superintendent of an apartment building on College Ave. near E. 171st St. in Claremont.

“It doesn’t appear to be from a fall. It appears to either be a hit or purposely blunt force trauma,” said Lt. William O’Toole, the commander of the NYPD’s Bronx Homicide Squad.

Both infants were naked, and one had a shower loofah wrapped near his neck, O’Toole said. They were discovered less than 12 hours after they were killed, he said.

Frustrated detectives spent weeks trying to find the boys’ mother. If she sought medical attention, it wasn’t at any of the hospitals police checked in the city, Westchester County and New Jersey.

Cops talked to every resident in the 42 apartments in the College Ave. building, as well as those in neighboring buildings. None recalled a pregnant woman living in or visiting the building.

“People gave us their fingerprints, gave us their DNA, so I think it’s kind of shocking that anybody would have two full term babies thrown in the garbage in the neighborhood,” O’Toole said.

Detectives also spoke to the residents of a homeless shelter across the street.

“Someone who is physically pregnant with twins should really show. We spoke to the people in the shelter, and most of the residents in the shelter were in shock as much as everybody was,” said O’Toole. “I think there were four females that were pregnant at the time in the shelter. All of them were still pregnant after the babies were found.”

The garbage in the area revealed no clues and video surveillance came up empty, police said.

“The investigation now is a scientific investigation, where we turn to fingerprints and DNA to be analyzed in the lab,” Det. Brianna Constantino said. “While that takes time, we’re looking for the help of the public.”


Regarding the mother, he said, “Of course she’s considered a person of interest. We’d like to speak to her. What trauma or what situation was she in... she gave birth to these babies and someone threw them in the garbage.”

“So we’d love to speak to the mother [and] help her, obviously, if she is in a desperate situation.”
 
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The newborn twins had died in cruelty, wrapped in brown paper and abandoned in a vermin-filled Bronx alley, but dozens of cops desperate to find out who killed them have made sure the babies had a final, peaceful farewell.

Around 20 NYPD officers, mostly detectives, turned out at Eternity Funeral Service in the Williamsbridge section of The Bronx Saturday for a funeral they arranged in honor of the infants, whom they named Zeke and Zane.

“Zeke is short for Ezekiel which means, ‘God’s strength,’ and Zane means ‘God’s Gift,’” said Lt. William O’Toole, a veteran homicide officer who said the twins’ case has impacted all who’ve worked on it.

“I have never seen a case like this,” he told The Post. “These were two newborn babies who were full term and then put in garbage bags and thrown in a rat infested backyard. Their little bodies had fractures. This has weighed heavy on every detective that has worked on the case.”

Zeke and Zane were placed in a single white casket, adorned with a bouquet of white flowers and a large blue bow. Blue and white bouquets, balloons, and teddy bears — one white and one blue — sat nearby.

Another neighbor teared up as they brought flowers, and stuffed toys. Bagpipes played. Six officers, three on each side, carried the casket to a waiting white hearse. Police saluted as it drove off to lay the twins in their final resting place.

Officers have searched high and low for the mother of the identical twins, checking hospitals as far away as New Jersey and Pennsylvania. There is a $12,000 reward for information about the case.

“We still work on the case everyday. We are hoping that we can get a DNA match,” said O’Toole, who begged anyone with information to come forward as he wondered allowed what lead to the children’s grisly end.

“We are going on follow up on every tip and hopefully we’d be able to find the mother of these children,” he said, adding, “Why would she do this? What kind of desperate situation was she in? Was she forced to do it? Was she alone? Whatever the situation, we are there to help her.”

The babies were less than 24 hours old when their bodies were discovered last November by a Bronx building super. They were found roughly 20 feet apart near a six-story College Avenue building in Claremont.

One of the newborns was partially covered in a pet training pad — with apparent head trauma and his umbilical cord wrapped around his neck — in a janitorial work area on the side of the building. The other was discovered 20 feet away, bound in a black plastic bag with no visible injuries, in the back of the building, sources and the superintendent said.

”It’s almost a year later and we haven’t given up,” Det. Shamika Thomas of the 44th precinct told The Post. “We continue to fight and try to solve this for the babies. We are still working hard from day one to now on this case.”

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New details have been revealed in the mysterious cold case of two baby boys that were found dead behind a building in the Bronx two years ago on Wednesday.
Police told Eyewitness News reporter CeFaan Kim that the two infant boys were identical twins and that their cause of death was a homicide.

No one has been arrested for their murders and there's still no closure.
"Sadness. There's so many different ways you can go around it," resident Vanessa Vasquez said.

One of the babies was found on a wee wee pad and the other in a black garbage bag under the AC unit.
The police department adopted the twins in a way and named them Zeke and Zane.

One of their names means god's gift and the other means god's strength.
"People would refer to them as John Doe 1 and John Doe 2 but we knew that they were something special," Detective Brianna Constantino said. "This was something that the 44 precinct along with Bronx homicide, we promised to see this through. Giving them names helps the community mourn because we mourn with the community," Brianna Constantino said.
Detectives have tracked down every tip but have come up empty.

"Normally when we deal with a homicide we have the family, we have the victims, we help them. We get the babies buried. In this case the crime victims people, we got the babies buried, we got them a plot, we had a funeral for them but we still don't have leads on who, on how they ended up back here. Where's their mother?" Lt. Sean O'Toole of the NYPD Bronx Homicide Squad said.
A DNA profile was recovered from the garbage bag.

It comes back to a female who investigators believe is the mother, but that profile is not in any database.
Investigators are now pleading for help.

"Think about the babies. They'd be two years old today. Give us a call. You know something, if there's somebody who's out there who felt something, something we should follow up on, call us," O'Toole said.
New York is a safe haven state and has safe haven laws.

"If you have a child that you are unable to care for you can drop that child off at a police department, a police station, at a firehouse, at an emergency room. The child will be cared for," said Adrienne Giunta of the Bronx DA Special Victims Division.
 
It's been 3 years since New York officers discovered the bodies of two newborn baby twins at the center of a cold murder case that still stumps detectives.
Every year since Eyewitness News has covered this story. The question is: how long can anyone hold such a horrific secret?
On Thursday night, a platoon of homicide detectives lit candles and prayed for twin newborn babies, who would seem to have no one else.

"This case, it weighs heavily on each and every one of our hearts, it pulls at the heartstrings," said Lt. Hector Fuentes of NYPD Bronx Homicide.
On the day the infants were born 3 years ago, someone beat them to death and threw them out with the trash behind an apartment building on College Ave.

Three years later, detectives still haven't been able to figure out who the boys' parents are.

Everyone in the building provided DNA samples, with not one match.
"And it goes without saying that we will never rest," Fuentes said. "We will do everything we can to bring justice for those two babies. We are their voice, we will speak for them."Thursday night, they stood side by side with community activists and clergy. A Crimestoppers van drove by.
Cops begged for help from the public to solve the case that haunts them every day.

"We hit the streets, we talked to the community, we did video canvasses and a year later we buried them," said Brianna Constantino of NYPD Bronx Homicide. "We gave them names of Zeke and Zain. Biblical names meaning god's strength and god's gift, hoping god gives us the strength to continue this investigation."
They are hoping for strength and justice for the littlest victims of murder.
 
I can't... :sorry:
i am also lost for words but the anger i feel speaks volumes ........ grrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrr... how could anyone do that while other mothers arms are aching to hold little ones, to love any child that they would feel lucky to have, hold, cherish and protect with their own lives , it is beyond my understanding to care so little that you would rather kill an unwanted or unplanned child rather than think of another solution for those babies... i know i thank God and the mothers of my children for the hard decision they had to make and for the previledge i was granted to take care and love and protect my children .. without them i would forever have had empty arms and a biggggggg hole in my heart ...
 
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A 36-year-old woman was charged Friday in the deaths of newborn twins who were found behind a New York City apartment building nearly five years ago, police said.

Stephanie Castillo, identified as the boys' mother, was arrested at a homeless shelter in the Bronx, police said. She is charged with murder and manslaughter.

The superintendent of a Bronx apartment building discovered the boys’ bodies on Nov. 9, 2020, in the building’s courtyard. The Medical Examiner determined the babies died from blunt force trauma.
Police officers organized a funeral service for the infants, whom they named Zeke and Zane. They were placed in a single white casket, with officers serving as pallbearers at the service.
Details of the investigation that led to Castillo's arrest were not immediately released.
 
The part that pisses me off is that this happened in the Bronx where there are numerous police stations, hospitals or churches that these babies could have been left off.

There is also numerous foster care agency offices that she could have walked into and surrendered those babies two.

The thing about NYC and the boroughs is that everything is very accessible by public transportation and because she was a thirty something year-old woman I have zero empathy for this monster.

I hope that she is held accountable but if she gets a liberal judge and/or jury who knows if she will be.
 
The part that pisses me off is that this happened in the Bronx where there are numerous police stations, hospitals or churches that these babies could have been left off.

There is also numerous foster care agency offices that she could have walked into and surrendered those babies two.

The thing about NYC and the boroughs is that everything is very accessible by public transportation and because she was a thirty something year-old woman I have zero empathy for this monster.

I hope that she is held accountable but if she gets a liberal judge and/or jury who knows if she will be.
This was exactly my train of thought. My clinical training was in NY (Brooklyn, Staten Island and Long Island) and I was really impressed with the social support there. There are wrap around services for women who don't want to parent the children they give birth to. They also have a Safe Haven on practically every block . She was not some scared teenager who was afraid of being harmed/killed by parents.
 
I agree with both of you, my cousin from the south was driving with me once and she was like why do We keep passing all these metal signs with babies on them? And I explained safe haven laws to her, she was really impressed. They’re everywhere and she’s old enough to know better. (Pic of the sign for those not familiar)
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Not Awesome!

Safe Haven laws exist... Awesome would've been to take advantage of the program!
Awesome would've been twin 5yo children getting ready to go to school.

The fact that she was arrested screams failure!

But looking back does no good. She chose this path. Can not imagine things looking up from here.
Awesome that they found her. She is a lost cause!
 
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