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- <text id=94TT0388>
- <title>
- Apr. 11, 1994: When Is Crib Death a Cover for Murder
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1994
- Apr. 11, 1994 Risky Business on Wall Street
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- MEDICINE, Page 63
- When Is Crib Death a Cover for Murder?
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p>Waneta Hoyt grieved the loss of her five children. Now, 23 years
- later, she is charged with killing them.
- </p>
- <p>By Anastasia Toufexis--With reporting by David Bjerklie/New York, Elizabeth Taylor/Chicago
- and Sarah Tippit/Orlando
- </p>
- <p> In the cruel roulette of life, Waneta Hoyt seemed to be an especially
- tragic loser. Nearly 30 years ago, she lost her first child,
- Erik, suddenly and inexplicably. The mother tearfully told doctors
- that she found him barely breathing in his crib and could not
- revive him. He was three months old. Waneta's second child,
- James, was a little over two when, according to his mother,
- he called out after breakfast one morning and expired. A daughter,
- Julie, died at 48 days; her mother was feeding the child when
- the infant choked, turned blue and died. Another daughter, Molly,
- died at home in bed at three months, and a similar fate befell
- another son, Noah, who was her last-born child.
- </p>
- <p> Doctors were mystified and intrigued. A pediatrician who had
- closely monitored the last two children wrote up the family's
- history in a 1972 medical journal as a classic example of how
- sudden infant death syndrome (or SIDS) can run in families.
- As for Hoyt, she went on to adopt a son, who is now 17. But
- she never forgot her dead offspring. She kept their photos throughout
- the house and laid flowers on their graves every Memorial Day.
- "She'd say, `I miss my children. They all died on me--you
- know, that crib disease,'" recalls Martha Nestle, a family
- friend. "Then she'd cry."
- </p>
- <p> Now it looks as if the bereaved mother may have been getting
- away with murder. Last week the 47-year-old Berkshire, New York,
- housewife sat in court charged with suffocating all five of
- her children. Authorities accuse her of smothering three with
- pillows, one with a bath towel and another by pressing its face
- against her shoulder (the specifics are based on a confession
- that Hoyt has now recanted). Says District Attorney William
- Fitzpatrick of Onondaga, New York, who initiated the investigation
- of Hoyt: "We have brought to justice a killer who preyed on
- her own children."
- </p>
- <p> The Hoyt case is not an isolated instance. In Waukegan, Illinois,
- this month, Gail Savage, who is accused of smothering her three
- babies, goes on trial for a child's death. In Garden City, Kansas,
- last June, Diane Lumbrera was convicted of fatally suffocating
- her son; she had already pleaded no contest in Texas to killing
- a daughter. Across the country, authorities are taking a harder
- look at SIDS deaths. According to medical examiners, police
- and prosecutors, SIDS is a label that is too readily affixed
- to mysterious deaths. They say that anywhere from 1% to as many
- as 20% of the 7,000 to 8,000 U.S. babies who die of SIDS each
- year actually expire of other causes, including murder. Generally
- the killer is the mother. Sometimes she slays for insurance
- or from frustration, and sometimes in a twisted bid for attention
- and sympathy. These sympathy junkies, says Vincent Di Maio,
- medical examiner of San Antonio, Texas, "usually keep killing
- until they're caught or run out of children."
- </p>
- <p> One reason the murders go undetected is that suffocation, the
- usual method of these infanticides, is virtually indistinguishable
- from SIDS on autopsy. As a result, single deaths don't raise
- much suspicion. Nor should they. But red flags should snap up
- when several apparently healthy babies die in one family. "Two
- SIDS deaths is improbable," observes Di Maio. "But three is
- impossible." Another sign of possible foul play: repeated bids
- for medical attention for the children before they die. "Often
- there's a long medical record of these babies being brought
- barely breathing to hospitals by the parent who says they have
- a history of turning blue and losing consciousness," explains
- Dr. Michael Baden, director of the forensic-sciences unit of
- the New York State police and an expert witness at Hoyt's preliminary
- hearing. "This isn't the pattern for SIDS, where babies have
- no serious prior problems and are suddenly dead in their cribs."
- </p>
- <p> But even such strong signals get missed. Doctors and police
- may be unaware of a family's history, or they may be blinded
- by pity for the bereft parents. Marybeth Tinning of Schenectady,
- New York, won only sympathy as, one by one, her nine youngsters
- died of SIDS and other vague natural causes between 1972 and
- 1985. Doctors and friends suspected some rare genetic defect
- was to blame, even though one of the victims was an adopted
- son. (Tinning was finally convicted in 1986 of murdering her
- last child.) "We have prejudices about what killers look like,"
- says D.A. Fitzpatrick, "and they don't look like nice middle-class
- moms from the suburbs who would do this for no reason."
- </p>
- <p> Psychiatrists say the killers commonly suffer from a variant
- of Munchausen's syndrome, a bizarre mental condition that impels
- people to feign or induce illness in order to get care and nurturing
- from doctors and hospitals. In Munchausen's by proxy, people
- injure their children in their place. They may inject the youngsters
- with poisons or drugs, or mix blood in their urine. Parents
- have even been caught by surveillance cameras attempting to
- smother their offspring in their hospital beds.
- </p>
- <p> Hoyt escaped suspicion for years. What finally led to her arrest
- was the two-decades-old medical article in Pediatrics. Fitzpatrick
- first read the paper eight years ago while preparing an infanticide
- case in order to familiarize himself with possible causes of
- SIDS. In the report, Dr. Alfred Steinschneider, now president
- of the Sudden Infant Death Syndrome Institute in Atlanta, proposed
- that a genetic defect could cause prolonged apnea, or breaks
- in breathing during a baby's sleep, and lead to SIDS. He bolstered
- his thesis with detailed accounts of the death of five babies
- in one unidentified family. Medical examiner Linda Norton, who
- passed the paper along to Fitzpatrick, offered an intriguing
- remark: "She said, `By the way, when you read the article, you
- may decide you have a serial killer here.'"
- </p>
- <p> Fitzpatrick agreed and began digging. The article referred to
- the family only as "H." But Fitzpatrick searched county medical
- records and eventually came up with the Hoyts. Much of the incriminating
- material in the case comes from the extensive research records
- kept by Steinschneider. "For Molly and Noah Hoyt," says Fitzpatrick,
- "we can account for virtually every day of their lives."
- </p>
- <p> Since the Hoyt case and similarly suspicious ones form much
- of the evidence for Steinschneider's theory that SIDS runs in
- families, that theory is being called into question, and along
- with it, the value of so-called apnea monitoring in preventing
- SIDS. Steinschneider's findings have supported the idea that
- families who have lost one baby to SIDS can avoid losing subsequent
- children by hooking up sleeping infants to devices that set
- off an alarm when the gaps between breaths become too long.
- </p>
- <p> Cases like Hoyt's and Tinning's, as well as the increasing awareness
- of child abuse in the U.S., have led law-enforcement and medical
- authorities to call for a more aggressive approach to investigating
- infant deaths. Most states now require an autopsy for all babies
- who die unexpectedly. Before a diagnosis of SIDS can be made,
- an examination of the scene of death and a review of the child's
- medical history are made. SIDS experts are calling for standardized
- protocols to guide such investigations.
- </p>
- <p> While all this may serve the interests of justice, it will doubtless
- cause greater pain to parents already stunned by the loss of
- a child to crib death or some other natural cause. Now, in addition
- to enduring their grief, they will face more intense questioning
- from officials. But SIDS parents are among the most fervent
- supporters of stricter investigations. "The truth," notes Thomas
- Moran, president of the SIDS alliance, "is that bias and confusion
- will disappear only when people are really sure why every baby
- in this country dies."
- </p>
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
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-