A French woman who admitted suffocating eight of her newborns
and concealing their corpses in the garden and garage of her
home has been charged with manslaughter.
Dominique Cottrez, a 46-year-old nurse's aide by profession,
said that after a bad experience with her first pregnancy she
never again wanted to see a doctor.
She admitted delivering the babies herself and placing the
corpses in plastic bags. She buried two of the newborns in
the garden and hid the other bodies in the garage, prosecutor
Eric Vaillant said.
The drama recalled gruesome baby killings of the past but
surpassed all other known cases in France in recent years in
the number of infants killed by their mother.
"She explained that she didn't want any more children and
that she didn't want to see a doctor to take contraceptives,"
Vaillant told a news conference. "She was perfectly conscious
of the fact that she was pregnant each time."
Cottrez and her husband, Pierre-Marie Cottrez, were detained
Wednesday after two corpses in plastic bags were discovered
in a garden by the new owners of a house that had belonged to
the woman's father in the town of Villers-au-Tertre in
northern France.
Under questioning, the woman admitted that there were six
other corpses and told investigators that they were in
plastic bags in the garage of her home, where they were
found.
The woman is still in detention and will undergo further
psychiatric testing, Vaillant said.
Her husband was freed from custody and not charged, although
he remains under judicial control. He claimed he knew nothing
about the pregnancies of his wife.
"As for Mr. Cottrez, the sky is falling on his head he told
us," the prosecutor said. "He told us that he was absolutely
not aware that his wife was pregnant."
Vaillant noted that Mrs. Cottrez is quite heavy, making it
easy to conceal a pregnancy. The prosecutor had said earlier
in a statement that the husband could be charged with failure
to report a crime and concealment of corpses.
The couple's two grown daughters, who are in their 20s, have
been questioned, Vaillant said. He refused to provide further
details about them or what they said.
Neighbors in this village in northern France expressed shock
after learning that Cottrez had killed her newborns.
"It's revolting. It is monstrous," said Janique Kaszynski,
who lives next door to the couple. "For me ... they aren't
human beings. It's monstrous to have killed eight viable
babies."
Police sealed the doors, gate and windows of the house where
the remains of some of the babies were discovered. DNA tests
are being conducted to establish for sure whether the couple
are the parents, and autopsies are being conducted on the
corpses to try to determine the cause of death.
The prosecutor said the bodies "don't show any sign" of
injuries.
France has seen a string of cases in recent years of mothers
killing their newborns and saving and hiding the corpses.
In one case, Celine Lesage was sentenced in March to 15 years
in prison after acknowledging in court that she killed six of
her newborns, whose corpses were found in plastic bags in her
basement in northwest France.
Another Frenchwoman, Veronique Courjault, was convicted last
year of murdering three of her newborn children. Her husband
discovered two of the corpses in a freezer while the two were
living in South Korea. During the trial psychiatrists
testified that she suffered from a psychological condition
known as "pregnancy denial."
Germany also has seen similar cases. In one, a woman was
convicted of manslaughter in 2006 and sentenced to the
maximum 15 years in prison for killing eight of her newborn
babies and burying them in flower pots and a fish tank in the
garden of her parents' home near the German-Polish border.
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