• You must be logged in to see or use the Shoutbox. Besides, if you haven't registered, you really should. It's quick and it will make your life a little better. Trust me. So just register and make yourself at home with like-minded individuals who share either your morbid curiousity or sense of gallows humor.

Sugar Cookie

Veteran Member
Bold Member!
Rebecca J. Dixon, 35, was taken into custody on a warrant, charging her with second-degree manslaughter in connection with the death of a 1-year-old child who police say was exposed to fentanyl, morphine and cocaine.

Medics arrived shortly after police and took the 1-year-old to Griffin Hospital where a doctor pronounced him dead and said the child had “no signs of life for approximately 70 minutes,” according to the affidavit.

That day, Dixon called out of work, and told her mother the child was “acting fussy and cranky when he woke up,” the affidavit said.

Dixon’s mother told police that she saw Dixon take the baby into her room that morning and kept him in there for the “entire morning and afternoon,” the affidavit said. Around 1 p.m., her mother told police, she heard her daughter call out and she ran upstairs, according to the affidavit.

The woman told Barbero she saw the 1-year-old lying face up on the bed “with no signs of life,” the affidavit said. Dixon and her mother started CPR and called 911.

When Barbero talked to Dixon, she told him the baby fell asleep face down in the crook of her elbow around 12:30 p.m. The affidavit said she told Barbero she also fell asleep and noticed the baby was not moving and felt limp only when she woke up.

Dixon consented to have her blood taken for analysis at the hospital that day, the affidavit stated.

About a month after Dixon’s interview with state police, James Gill, the state’s chief medical examiner, told investigators on Sept. 9 that he classified the manner of death as homicide, the affidavit said.

Gill told investigators the cause was “acute intoxication due to the combined effects of fentanyl and morphine, with recent cocaine exposure,” the affidavit said.

On Sept. 10, Barbero spoke with a supervisory toxicology analyst, who said the blood taken from Dixon the day of the Based on the investigation, Barbero applied for an arrest warrant, charging Dixon in connection with the child’s death.
1602815981869.png
 
Last edited:
A judge spared 38-year-old Rebecca Dixon from prison time in the 2020 accidental overdose death of her infant son, provided she stay off drugs for the next five years.
Dixon told Judge Peter Brown Wednesday that she will remain haunted by her son’s death, but dedicated to staying off drugs to honor his memory.

“There’s nothing worse than the loss of a child, especially knowing I’m to blame,” Dixon told the judge during her sentencing on a charge of risk of injury to a minor related to the death of her son, who was three weeks shy of his first birthday when he died in her family’s Blue Ridge Terrace home July 6, 2020.
“Unfortunately I was in a very dark place after I lost my son, Luca, and it took me a little longer to come out of the shock and truly understand the consequences of my actions,” Dixon said. “Once I finally did, all the lights came on, and I knew that in order to honor my son’s life I had to dedicate myself to my sobriety.”
Though still tormented, she said that “When those dark thoughts start to creep into my mind, I remind myself that I’ve already survived the worst life can throw at me.”

Dixon’s son died from “acute intoxication due to the combined effects of fentanyl and morphine, with recent cocaine exposure,” according to an arrest warrant affidavit.
It was unclear exactly how the baby ingested the drugs.
Continue reading at link
 
Back
Top