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Lindsey
LOWE
March 13, 2013
GALLATIN — A Hendersonville police officer was
overcome with emotion Tuesday as he testified about finding a dead
baby under bloody towels in the home of a 25-year-old woman charged
with killing her newborn twins.
Prosecutors say Lindsey Lowe had an affair with
someone other than her fiance and planned the deaths of her children
so no one would find out.
In his opening statement, Assistant District
Attorney Ron Blanton told a Sumner County jury that there were no
diapers, formula or any preparations for a baby’s arrival. He said no
one knew Lowe was pregnant, including her parents and a sister who
also lived at home.
Lowe, now 26, has pleaded not guilty to two
first-degree murder charges, two charges of felony murder and two
charges of aggravated child abuse.
John Pellegrin, one of Lowe’s defense attorneys,
said Lowe grew up in a close and loving family that was active in City
Road United Methodist Church in Madison.
He said Lowe suffered from a “dissociative state of
mind.” He said she was a bridesmaid in a wedding the previous weekend.
“She was pregnant but she refused to accept it,” he
said. “She literally pushed it out of her mind.”
Pellegrin described Lowe giving birth on a toilet
in the home she shared with her parents and said her memory of the
events is “sketchy.”
He said that while she was giving birth, she
thought “some internal organ” had come out. “She doesn’t know what’s
happening.”
Pellegrin said she put the babies in a laundry
basket next to her bed. He did not offer a theory as to how they died.
Officers testify
After opening statements, several Hendersonville
police officers testified, including Master Patrol Officer Jeremy
Fentress, who retrieved the infants.
Fentress became emotional on the stand, pausing
before telling how he pulled back a plaid sheet, and then bloody
towels, to discover the first infant.
Officer James Garrett later testified that officers
didn’t know until after Lowe was interviewed by Detective Steve Malach
that there were two babies in the basket. He told how he and Fentress
pulled out the first baby to find it still connected by an umbilical
cord to a second infant at the bottom of the basket. Garrett said the
second baby was cool to the touch. He said he placed the babies back
in the basket next to each other.
Lowe did not turn to watch a screen that projected
photos of the ashen bodies of the dead infants.
She cried when prosecutors played a tape of her
father calling police on the morning the babies were found.
Detective surprised
Malach, the lead investigator on the case, gave the
day’s last testimony.
He said that after hearing of the death of an
infant, he went to the pediatric dentist’s office where Lowe worked to
talk with her. He said her mood changed from jovial to serious when he
told her he “found the laundry basket.”
“My mission was to sit down and talk with Lindsey
Lowe and find out what happened,” he said.
He said he drove Lowe to the Hendersonville police
station and they talked about her wanting to start an interior design
business.
Once at the police station, Malach said Lowe told
him she knew from the beginning that she was pregnant and that she had
been engaged to a man named Jonathan Brooks for about three years. She
told him she had twice had an affair with a man named Jeremy Smith.
Malach said Lowe told him that no one knew about the pregnancy and
that she didn’t want to disappoint Brooks or her parents.
“As I was talking to her, she corrects me and she
said there were two babies,” Malach said. “I had no clue.”
Malach then relayed that information to his
superior officer. “I knew I needed to get out of that room and make
sure that second baby wasn’t still alive.”
Malach then detailed how Lowe told him she had
killed the infants by placing her hand over each of their mouths until
each baby stopped crying.
Jurors are expected to hear Lowe’s videotaped
confession today.
Trial Under Way For Woman Accused Of Killing
Newborn Twins
NewsChannel5.com
March 12, 2013
GALLATIN, Tenn. - The high-profile trial of a
Hendersonville woman accused of smothering her newborn twins is under
way, and both sides agree that the defendant made no preparations for
the babies' births.
Lindsay Lowe has been charged with two counts of
premeditated murder, two counts of felony murder, and two counts of
aggravated child abuse.
In court on Tuesday, attorneys described how the
26-year-old sought no prenatal care and bought no diapers or other
supplies before giving birth to the boys at home on September 12,
2011.
Prosecutors suggested in their opening statements
that Lowe's lack of preparations showed she never intended for the
babies to live. District Attorney Ray Whitley said she cleaned up
bathroom where she delivered because she shared it with her sister.
Lowe's defense attorney John Pellegrin said in his
opening statement that the case is more than a case about an "evil
mother." Lowe cried while Pellegrin painted her as a "good girl" who
met her fiance at Western Kentucky, and was never in trouble.
But defense attorneys argued that Lowe had blocked
the pregnancy from her mind, saying she didn't even know what was
happening when she started to give birth.
Attorney John Pellegrin said Lowe thought "an
organ" was coming out of her when she gave birth to the first baby on
the toilet, and felt a baby's head and ear coming out. He said Lowe
did not understand what was going on even when she gave birth to the
second twin. She later put the two deceased babies in a laundry basket
next to her bed. Her mother found one of the babies in a laundry
basket when Lowe went to work, and her father called 911.
She was a bridesmaid in a wedding in Kentucky just
days before giving birth, and did not understand why she started
lactating.
Lowe told police she smothered the babies after
they were born, but defense attorneys suggested that idea was planted
by police.
The first witness called to the stand by the
prosecution was the 911 dispatcher who took the call from Lowe's
father. Lowe sobbed while they played the call for the court.
After a short sidebar, the prosecution then called
the first officer who responded to the home following the 911 call.
The state brought out a diagram of the Lowe family home to help
demonstrate what was found at the home. The officer teared up when he
recalled seeing Baby Boy Lowe #1 deceased.
He testified that the white laundry basket where
the twins were found was to the right of Lowe's bed, beneath her
bedroom window.
He added that officers on scene as well as Lowe's
parents had no idea there was a second baby in the laundry basket
until the detective who interviewed Lowe called and told them.
The prosecution showed pictures of the bathroom
where the babies were born, as well of pictures of the babies after
they were found in the laundry basket.
Detective Sgt. Jim Vaughn, testified that both
babies were left in the basket, which was taken away from the Lowe
home in an ambulance.
Prosecutors will likely argue that Lowe killed the
infants, in part, to conceal an affair that led to her pregnancy. At
the time she was engaged to John Brooks, but DNA on the infants found
he was not the father.
Defense attorneys have argued that Lowe was
mentally ill.
Prosecutors have said they will not seek the death
penalty.
Last week, a judge again ruled Lowe's confession
admissible along with text messages between her and Jeffrey Smith, the
babies' father.
Smith, who lives in Kentucky, spoke to NewsChannel
5 by phone recently. He has been subpoenaed to testify on behalf of
the prosecution at the upcoming trial. Smith told NewsChannel 5 that
he did not know Lowe was pregnant, and that he will explain at the
trial how he met Lowe. He also said he is actually a twin, and
initially did not believe detectives when they called to tell him
about the twins.
Lowe was released on bond shortly after her arrest
in 2011.
On Monday, a jury of seven men and five women was
seated. Three male alternates will also listen to arguments.
Jurors will not be sequestered, meaning they can go
home every night, as long as they abide by the rules. The trial will
take about five days now that the jury is seated. The trial will only
go to 5 p.m. on weekdays.
NewsChannel 5 Obtains Copy Of Lindsey Lowe's
Entire Confession
By Nick Beres - NewsChannel5.com
February 28, 2013
GALLATIN, Tenn. – How and why would a
mother kill her own newborn twins? In this exclusive report we hear
from Lindsey Lowe in her own words.
Police said Lowe confessed on videotape to
smothering her twin newborns in the bathroom of her family's
Hendersonville home just moments after they were born.
She pleaded not guilty, but police said she
confessed. NewsChannel 5 reporter Nick Beres obtained an exclusive
copy of Lowe's entire statement.
It has been a crucial piece of the prosecution's
case, and it's what Lowes' attorneys have tried, unsuccessfully, in
recent days to get excluded from her murder trial.
The confession revealed details that officials said
were intimate and chilling.
Police questioned Lowe after the discovery of the
dead infants:
Detective: We're going to talk
freely, all right? And we're going to try to make heads or tails of
what's going on in a bad situation. How long did you know you were
pregnant?
Lowe: Probably almost the whole
time.
Detective: Okay. Did you go to a
doctor at all?
Lowe: No.
Detectives asked Lowe why she didn't tell her
fiancé Jonathan Brooks about the pregnancy. She admitted to cheating
on him with another man who turned out to be the father.
Lowe: I really didn't tell
anybody. My family is very conservative Christian people and I was
just very -- I don't know. I just didn't want to disappoint anybody.
The detective asked about how she gave birth in a
bathroom at home.
Lowe: I didn't know what to do. I
was -- I guess I went into shock. I was scared.
Detective: I mean, you had to have
-- the baby had to come out. How did that happen?
Lowe: Just came out.
Detective: Where did it land?
Lowe: In the toilet. I just didn't
know what to do.
Detective: So you wrapped them in
a towel and you did what?
Lowe: I just put them in that
basket. I didn't know what to do.
Detective: What was your plan?
Lowe: I don't know. I don't know.
The detective then pressed Lowe on what she did to
the babies.
Lowe: I guess... I don't want to
call it smother. I was just trying to like keep them quiet.
Detective: How were you doing
that?
Lowe: Just put my hand down there
over the mouth.
Detective: I know. I know. It's
okay. You knew it couldn't breathe, right?
Lowe: Nods head.
Detective: Essentially you know
you killed the baby.
Lowe: Nods head.
Detective: You didn't want to.
Lowe: Nods head.
Detective: But you did?
Lowe: Yeah.
Detective: They were clearly alive
and then you clearly killed them. Is that correct?
Lowe: Yes sir.
The prosecution has said they will argue Lowe's
statement confirms she committed first degree murder. Legal analysts
said they expect the defense may argue Lowe panicked and didn't mean
to kill the infants.
Lindsey Lowe's trial has been scheduled to begin on
March 11. You can watch gavel-to-gavel coverage on television on
NewsChannel5+, online at NewsChannel5.com and over a mobile device on
our NewsChannel5 Mobile apps and mobile site.
The district attorney announced in November that
they would not seek the death penalty. Each count of murder carries
the possibility of a life sentence.
Police: Mother Admitted To Killing Twin Newborn
Boys
By Kim Gebbia - NewsChannel5.com
September 15, 2011
HENDERSONVILLE, Tenn. – Police said a
Hendersonville mother has admitted to killing her twin newborn boys by
suffocating them after they were born at her home so her parents
wouldn't hear them crying.
According to the court affidavit, 25-year-old
Lindsey Lowe knew she was pregnant when she gave birth to the full
term baby boys. She said she told no one about the pregnancy and never
saw a doctor.
Lowe was a graduate from Western Kentucky
University, a dental office employee and this past weekend, a
bridesmaid in a sorority sister's wedding.
Her coworkers at a Nashville dentist office didn't
even know she was pregnant.
"So many lives are ruined, it's a tragedy for
everybody," said co-worker Susan Harris.
They said they are shocked and saddened by the news
and the disturbing details revealed in a confession to police.
"We are all shocked and saddened and pray for her
and her family," said another co-worker Michelle Stainback.
On Monday around 10:30 p.m. Lowe told police she
gave birth to a baby in the toilet. When the baby started to cry, Lowe
was apparently concerned her parents would hear.
Lowe admitted to police she held her hand over the
baby's mouth to keep it from crying – and kept her hand in place for
several minutes until the baby was dead.
Minutes later the second baby was born in the same
way. When it was delivered, Lowe told police both babies were together
in the toilet.
The affidavit said Lowe told police the second
child was crying, but not as loud. She said she put her hand over the
baby's mouth like the other and waited for the child to die. Lowe told
police the second baby died quicker than the first.
Lowe then told police she placed both dead babies
in a laundry basket and covered them with towels to keep them from
being discovered.
Her father, Mark Lowe, found one of the babies in
the laundry basket on Wednesday and called police. The second baby was
later found.
Officials arrested the woman at her place of work.
They said during an interview with police, Lindsey Lowe admitted to
killing the babies by suffocating them.
Lowe was arrested and charged with first-degree
murder. She was being held without bond and undergoing a medical
evaluation.
"This brings us down to that question that everyone
is asking, why? And I can't give you the answer for," said Lt. Scott
Ryan with Hendersonville Police.
While that is still unclear, Lowe's had an
outpouring of support on her Facebook page. Others used it as a podium
for their anger at the death of two innocent babies.
Something that is difficult for most to understand.
"I have tried to put myself in that position over
and over last night and you know don't know what they are thinking,
what they are going through. But if there is anyone out there going
through this you hope that they would reach out to someone," Harris
said.
Investigators said the babies both appeared to be
full term and weighed about 5 to 6 pounds each. Their bodies were
taken to the state medical examiner's office in Nashville for
autopsies.
Friends tell us Lowe has been engaged to her
college boyfriend since 2008. Police were working to determine the
identity of the father and conducting paternity tests.
Lowe has her first bond hearing Monday morning, and
her first court hearing is scheduled for September 28.