Maria Persson, a midwife and husband Anders Persson living in Malmo, Sweden were arrested in early 1912 after it was discovered that they had been in the practice of disposing of infants. Mr. Persson was a foreman at a creosote plant and maintained the company’s boiler. It is thought that this is where the corpses of newborns were destroyed after having been delivered to the boiler room in a hand basket.
The midwife claimed that her husband
sent coffins to a cemetery caretaker for burial, but caretaker denied other
than having received small boxes of “immature fetuses, according to the
midwife's certificate.”
An extensive investigation revealed
that 73 children had gone missing. Twenty-one of them were determined to be
dead. Only three were properly accounted for.
The prosecution of the couple lasted
over two months, beginning March 29 and ending June 12, 1912. No homicide could
be proved and the couple were convicted of minor charges and given a light
sentence.
[Robert St. Esteph, based on a rather difficult to follow
auto-translation of: “Åtskilliga spädbarn dog hos änglamakerskorna,”
Sydsvenskan, Dec. 2, 2012]
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For more cases of “Baby Farmers,” professional child care providers who murdered children see The Forgotten Serial Killers.
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For more cases of “Baby Farmers,” professional child care providers who murdered children see The Forgotten Serial Killers.
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[760-1/13/21]
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