Fetus Snatch Suspect Faces Hearing
Lisa Montgomery, 36, of Melvern, Kansas, is expected to appear in court Monday on charges she murdered a pregnant woman and stole her unborn baby. She remained held at a detention center in Kansas City, Kan., but it was unclear whether she will be arraigned in Kansas or Missouri.
Authorities said Montgomery confessed to strangling Bobbie Jo Stinnett, cutting out the fetus and taking the baby back to Kansas. Montgomery is then believed to have made the two-and-a-half hour drive from Skidmore, Mo., to Topeka, Kansas, where she phoned her husband to say she had just given birth, reports CBS News Correspondent Cynthia Bowers. He and her children met Montgomery and drove them to Melvern.
According to locals, Montgomery wasted no time showing off the baby around town including stopping off at a diner.
"We had no idea," said family friend Darrel Schultz. "I'm sure that a lot of people that held that baby that day feel terrible that this happened."
The baby girl was later recovered unharmed.
"The one thing I've found has brought me a lot of joy is that they found her daughter alive and that way a small portion of Bobbi Jo will live on," said Buck Potter, her father.
The miracle baby as some were calling her is now named Victoria Jo and is said to be in good health at a Topeka hospital.
The Rev. Harold Hamon refrained from directly discussing the death of his neighbor whose baby was cut from her womb after she had been strangled.
Instead, the subject of this week's sermon was forgiveness.
Churchgoers in two communities grieved Sunday for the young woman and struggled to understand the horrific slaying.
"It's almost unbelievable that right under your nose something terrible can be happening," said Hamon, who lives in the small town of Skidmore in northwestern Missouri.
Hamon said he was probably addressing Christmas cards when Stinnett, 23, was killed. A short time later, a member of his congregation called to say she had heard an ambulance and wondered if anyone near the church was hurt. Hamon said he looked out the window and saw police cars parked in front of Stinnett's house.
The Rev. Mike Wheatly, pastor of First Church of God in Melvern, said he wrote his sermon about the birth of Jesus before details about Stinnett's death surfaced.
Titled, "A Baby Changed Everything," it had added relevance.
"You could've put the situation of Bobbie Jo Stinnett in the same sermon because they are both special babies," he said.
Hamon married Bobbie Jo and Zeb Stinnett last year at his Skidmore Christian Church.
"They were kids in the neighborhood, nice young kids," Hamon said. "She's just a real nice girl, real pretty, quiet and reserved."
Stinnett's mother found her body in a pool of blood inside the couple's small white home on Thursday afternoon. Stinnett had been eight months pregnant with the couple's first child.
Police recovered Stinnett's baby a day later after tracking down Montgomery through e-mails she had sent Stinnett about buying a dog.
Montgomery, a mother of two, lied to family and friends about being pregnant with twins and suffering a miscarriage, investigators said. Detectives doubt whether she was pregnant at all.
She met her husband at a Topeka fast-food restaurant with Stinnett's baby, telling him she had gone into labor while shopping in the city, authorities said.
Montgomery's husband has not been charged.