Showing posts with label Zahra Baker. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Zahra Baker. Show all posts

Wednesday, October 27, 2010

Zahra Baker Found Dead in Miserable Condition

0 comments
Police in North Carolina found a prosthetic leg, which they believe belonged to the lack of Australia girl Zahra Baker, who feared dead.
Zahra, who lost a leg to bone cancer and hearing problems, was reported missing from her home in the small town of Hickory on 9 October. He lived there with his Australian father and American stepmother Adam Baker Elisa.
Zahra police believe was murdered and have refused to rule his father and stepmother, whom Baker met on the Internet, as suspects.

Hickory Police Chief Tom Adkins, told reporters Wednesday that the leg is in a thick zone of Christie Road in Caldwell County late Tuesday afternoon.
"We're trying to positively confirm the prosthetic leg is Zahra by the serial number within the outer shell," said Adkins.
"The prosthetic leg was originally installed in Australia and will take some time to confirm it is yours."
Hickory police are in the process of obtaining your medical records in Australia, including the model, and serial composition of the leg.
DNA testing is still being carried out on a mattress found in the Foothills Landfill Environment.
Mr. and Mrs. Zahra Baker told police might have been kidnapped.
Mrs. Baker, 42, remains in custody after police accused her of obstructing justice for allegedly writing a ransom note found in fake police were alerted that day Zahra was gone.
Baker, a former Queensland sugar mill worker, was arrested Monday on charges unrelated to the disappearance of her daughter.
The charges include five counts of worthless checks, two counts of threat communications and one count of assault with a deadly weapon.
Read More ->>

Zahra Baker Found dead

0 comments
As the search for 3 weeks of age for the lack of a North Carolina girl continues, the search teams have found what police say could be an important piece of evidence - an artificial leg in line with that used by Zahra Baker.
Searchers found the first leg, while scrubbing a brushy area near Christie Road in Caldwell County, Hickory Police Chief Tom Adkins said in a brief news conference Wednesday. The authorities have yet to check the serial number to confirm the first leg is 10 years old, Zahra, a native of Australia.
Searchers also returned to the family home in Hickory to find additional evidence. Police taped off the chair and brought a back hoe to dig at least two holes near the house.

Wednesday afternoon, a neighbor said he saw investigators carrying two bags of household trash and consideration of an access. With the setting sun, the authorities could be seen inside the house, looking for a bedroom.
For two weeks, police have said they believe that Zahra is dead.
The events were the latest - and perhaps most important - in a frantic search that has captured worldwide attention. The authorities have combed three counties, several homes and trailers, a dump and a rural lots used for fertilizer, while the trees in search of the remains of Zahra, leg or DNA testing.
Zahra, the deaf, used prosthetic leg from his left leg was amputated several months due to bone cancer.
Nobody has been charged in the disappearance of Zahra, but his stepmother and his father have been arrested on other charges.
Elisa Baker, 42, was charged with obstructing justice after police say she admitted writing a fake ransom note. Adam Baker, 33, was arrested this week on unrelated charges of assault and writing bad checks.
Officials would not say Wednesday whether to charge any person would be considered with the death of Zahra, in the absence of his body.
Experts say it is difficult - but not impossible - to prosecute a murder case if the victim's body not found.
Zahra was reported missing on October 9, but police said they have not found anyone besides his father and stepmother, who claim to have seen alive since 25 September.
Without a body, prosecutors often lack substantial evidence to build their case, as an autopsy, the exact cause of death, time of death and last known location of the victim.
Should be based on circumstantial evidence to show a murder has occurred and to remove any reasonable possibility that the victim is still alive.
"You're starting with a big problem," said Tad DiBiase, a former federal prosecutor in Washington, DC He received a sentence in a murder case without a body in 2006. In the present case studies at national level.
"In these cases circumstantial, you have to test a series of events that point to the defendant," said DiBiase, who has counted about 330 cases of murder without a body, in the U.S. "Only the strongest of cases go to trial."
Although the law does not require the body of a person who is found to treat a case of murder, the lack of a body makes the job harder for prosecutors.
In criminal cases, the prosecution always has the burden of proving the defendant's guilt beyond a reasonable doubt. The defense did not have to prove anything to win an acquittal. But Charlotte defense attorney George Laughrun said that although the burden of proof is not reversed in a murder case with a missing body, may be in the minds of the jurors.
"The argument of the prosecution is saying, 'Well, if she is not dead, where is it?" "Laughrun said. "The defense again - 'We have to prove that." But the planes did not fall from the sky, and girls do not go away. "
On Wednesday night, Adam Baker made bail and left the Catawba County Jail, where he was held in $ 7,000 bonds. Elisa Baker was still being held on bail of $ 65,000.
Searchers continued to comb the house of a baker in Hickory, although some of the dozen or more researchers began to leave early in the dark. Authorities were not saying they planned to look next, or when any person can be charged in her disappearance.

Read More ->>
 

Recent Posts

Recent Comments

| News Alert © 2009. All Rights Reserved | Template Style by My Blogger Tricks .com | Design by Brian Gardner | Back To Top |