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“I did it”: The US woman confesses to the death of the Baby in 1997 in front of the camera, tells frightening moments

Keri Mazzuca you confess to crimes (screen grave from video)

A 52-year-old US woman was initially refused to participate in a 1997 murder case, but within an hour she confessed to a terrible crime during a police interview.The 1997 murder case began after the authorities had found the body of a child who was appointed Baby Moses as part of a Moses statue in Albanys Washington Park.The latest developments in DNA technology led to a breakthrough in the case in the summer. The authorities questioned Keri Mazzua in September 2024, whereby the interview material was recently published, Daily Mail reported.During the recorded interview, Mazzua initially retained informed behavior, which calmly gestured and at the same time refused to connect to the case. When Detective Rob Lawyer asked about potential leads, she replied negatively.When Mazzua was presented with photographic evidence and DNA findings on her maternal connection, he recognized her guilt and confessed: “I did it.”

Baby Moses' mother talks about the fire of the fire

She revealed the birth in her bathtub, transported the child in her car and ultimately burned the remains.Although she initially claimed to have handed over the baby to a stranger, she later admitted the child to suffocate. The autopsy showed that the child breathed and contradicted their claims of natural death.Mazzua can then be heard that she suffocated the child by putting it in a pocket and said she couldn't remember whether she had suffocated him. After her guilty request against homicide in February, she received a 25-year prison sentence, according to the News10. The case had remained unsolved because the parking workers in 1997 contained a charred blue pillow cover that contained the child's remains.The community had honored the child and named him Moses Washington. He received a proper funeral with a white coffin and a marble degree with a lamb that was labeled: “Citizen of Albany, child of God”.

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