HAMILTON, Ohio (WKRC) - Video from the police interview of the Butler County woman who killed her 6- year-old son was released Friday. In the three-hour video, Brittany Gosney's story changes from James Hutchinson missing to her leaving him at a park, running him over and then throwing his body...
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Video from Brittany Gosney's police interview after death of son released
Video from the police interview of the Butler County woman who killed her 6- year-old son was released Friday.
In the three-hour video, Brittany Gosney's story changes from James Hutchinson missing to her leaving him at a park, running him over and then throwing his body into the Ohio River.
"A 6-year-old just doesn't get up and walk out the door," a detective says to Gosney in the video. "There's more to the story than what you're telling me. My partner's talked to James [Hamilton] extensively, and he's coming off this slowly. I would suggest, for you, tell me the truth now."
During an hours long police interview on the same day Brittany Gosney told police a fake story of her missing 6-year-old son, the mother of three routed through her purse, applied lip balm, filed her nails, yawned, slumped on the table and sipped on a Pepsi before detectives got her version of...
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Middletown mother gives her version of son’s death in police interrogation video
During an hours-long police interview on the same day Brittany Gosney told police a fake story about her 6-year-old son being missing, the mother of three routed through her purse, applied lip balm, filed her nails, yawned, slumped on the table and sipped on a Pepsi before detectives got her version of James Hutchison’s murder.
The Butler County Prosecutor’s Office has released one of several interrogation interviews of Gosney. The first took place in the Middletown police conference room.
For awhile, Gosney stuck with the story that the Rosa Parks Elementary first-grader was missing. But little by little, as Hamilton was interrogated in a separate room, Gosney gave her confession, although mitigated, to what happened at Rush Run Wildlife Park in Preble County.
During the 3-hour, 19-minute interrogation, Gosney showed no emotion, did not refer to her dead son by name and did not ask if police were searching for her child.
Gosney first told Detective Jon Hoover that James and his siblings went to bed at 9 p.m. and she went to bed soon after. Because she takes medication for anxiety and other things, Gosney said she was “out” until Hamilton woke her and asked if she had seen James.
Hamilton woke up about 4 or 5 a.m. and found the boy was not in the house, Gosney says. Then Hamilton went looking for James and drove around the area.
Hoover noted a young child had been missing since early morning and she didn’t come to the police until six hours later.
“Where do you think the child is now, any ideas?” Hoover asked Gosney.
“I have no idea,” she answered.
After talking with Hamilton, the detective told Gosney that her boyfriend was giving a different version of what happened.
“I am very concerned ... not only for your boy, I am very concerned there is something you are not telling me,” Hoover tells Gosney.
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