MN RED WING JAMIE INFANT DOE: WF, newborn, found in Goodhue County, MN - 4 November 1999 *IDENTIFIED*

RED WING JAMIE INFANT DOE: WF, newborn, found in Goodhue County, MN - 4 November 1999 A5Bzb4W


A full term infant with umbilical cord still attached was found 10 yds north of the Mississippi shore near 800 Levee Dr, Redwing MN. The body showed slight signs of decomposition upon discovery. The infant had not been in the water for long. The race of the decedent is most likely white. This infant is genetically related maternally to the decedent in case# GC03-127. Authorities named her Jamie.


*CLICK THE REPORT BUTTON IF YOU'D LIKE THIS CASE MOVED TO THE GENERAL DISCUSSION AREA TO BE OPENED FOR COMMENTING.
 
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NamUs UP # 4795

ME/C Case Number: GC99-158
Goodhue County, Minnesota
0 to 1 year old White Female

Case Report - NamUs UP # 4795
Case Information

Status Unidentified
Case number GC99-158
Date found November 04, 1999 13:13
Date created February 09, 2009 11:29
Date last modified February 22, 2017 08:25
Investigating agency
date QA reviewed June 20, 2011 21:26

Local Contact (ME/C or Other)
Agency Southern Minnesota Regional ME Office
Phone 507-284-2121
Case Manager
Name Lindsey Thomas
Phone 612-215-6334

Demographics
Estimated age Infant
Minimum age 0 years
Maximum age 1 years
Race White
Ethnicity
Sex Female
Weight (pounds) 6, Estimated
Height (inches) 21, Measured
Body Parts Inventory (Check all that apply)
All parts recovered
Body conditions
Recognizable face
Probable year of death 1999 to 1999

Circumstances
Location Found
GPS coordinates
Address 1 10 yards North of Levee Dr
Address 2
City Red Wing
State Minnesota
Zip code 55066
County Goodhue
Circumstances
A full term infant with umbilical cord still attached was found 10 yds north of the Mississippi shore near 800 Levee Dr, Redwing MN. The body showed slight signs of decomposition upon discovery. The infant had not been in the water for long. The race of the decedent is most likely white. This infant is genetically related maternally to the decedent in case# GC03-127.

Physical
Hair color Brown
Head hair
Straight, brown hair

Left eye color
Right eye color
Eye description
Irides are dark in color

No other distinctive body features

Other distinctive
physical characteristics
Feet are 8 cm in length.

Fingerprints
Status: Fingerprint information is currently not available

Other items found
with body
The body was wrapped in a towel

Dental
Status: Dental information / charting is available and entered

DNA
Status: Sample submitted - Tests complete
 
Last edited by a moderator:
http://www.doenetwork.org/cases/604ufmn.html

Case File: 604UFMN
The Doe Network


RED WING JAMIE INFANT DOE: WF, newborn, found in Goodhue County, MN - 4 November 1999 A5Bzb4W


Composite of the victim by NCMEC


Unidentified Female
Date of Discovery: November 4, 1999
Location of Discovery: Red Wing, Goodhue County, Minnesota
Estimated Date of Death: 1-2 weeks prior
State of Remains: Recognizable face
Cause of Death: Unknown

Physical Description
** Listed information is approximate

Estimated Age: Newborn
Race: White
Gender: Female
Height: 21"
Weight: 6 lbs.
Hair Color: Brown, straight.
Eye Color: Irides are dark in color.

Distinguishing Marks/Features: Feet are 8 cm in length.

Dentals: Not available.
Fingerprints: Not available.
DNA: Available.
Clothing & Personal Items
Clothing: The body was wrapped in a towel.

Jewelry: Unknown

Additional Personal Items: Unknown

Case History
The body of a full-term infant with the umbilical cord still attached was discovered 10 yards north of the Mississippi River shore near 800 Levee Drive. Authorities named her Jamie.

Another baby, 1044UMMN, was located in 2003, and is genetically related maternally. Police believe the children had separate fathers. Investigators believe that the infants were born alive. Autopsies were never able to ascertain causes of death. The mother of the children may have hidden the pregnancies and is probably familiar with the area.

Forensic artists from the National Center for Missing and Exploited Children used photographs of the bodies and the infants' skull measurements to create composite drawings of what the babies might have looked like at the time of their deaths. The clothing in the drawings is not connected to the investigation.

Authorities hope the composites can help piece together a frustrating puzzle. Over the years they have had more than 100 leads.

After the discovery of the infants, a local couple paid to have them buried next to their own stillborn daughter, under headstones that read "God's Little Angel."

Investigating Agency(s)
If you have any information about this case please contact;

Agency Name: Southern Minnesota Regional Medical Examiner's Office
Agency Contact Person: Lindsey Thomas
Agency Phone Number: 507-284-2121
Agency Case Number: GC99-158
NCIC Case Number: U530018814
NamUs Case Number: UP #4795
Please refer to this number when contacting any agency with information regarding this case.

Information Source(s)
NamUs
WCCO News Archive
 
https://letsfindthem.wordpress.com/tag/unidentified-baby/

Two Unidentified Babies Discovered Deceased In Minnesota May Belong To The Same Mother

Authorities believe the two unidentified babies below may have the same biological mother. Although, they believed they had separate fathers. Both were discovered deceased in Minnesota less than three years apart.

RED WING JAMIE INFANT DOE: WF, newborn, found in Goodhue County, MN - 4 November 1999 JKE6vXq


Baby #1

Forensic artists from the National Center for Missing and Exploited Children used photographs of the bodies and the infants’ skull measurements to create composite drawings of what the babies might have looked like at the time of their deaths.

The first victim was discovered on December 7, 2003 in Old Frontenac, Goodhue County, Minnesota

Estimated Date of Death: No more than two weeks, no less than two days.

Estimated age: Newborn (less than 48 hours old)
Hair: Curly, black hair.
Approximate Height/Weight: 14″; 7 lbs.

The unidentified baby boy was discovered on December 7, 2003 in Florence Township Beach in Frontenac, MN.

NCIC Number for baby number one:
U860017958 (Please refer to this number when contacting any agency with information regarding this case.)

The case may be related to another unidentified newborn found in Red Wing in 1999.

RED WING JAMIE INFANT DOE: WF, newborn, found in Goodhue County, MN - 4 November 1999 LbMD00h


Reconstruction of Victim by NCMEC – NOTE: Outfits shown in the age-progressed photos are not the actual outfits worn during discovery.)

The infant is a girl and she was located November 4, 1999 on the bank of the Mississippi River, in the small boat harbor in Red Wing, MN, a little over three years before the discovery of the boy. She was given the name Jamie.

Time of death: At-least 48 hours prior to discovery but no longer than two weeks.

Authorities think the composites could help piece together a frustrating puzzle. Over the years they have had over a 100 leads, yet the investigations remain unsolved.
Investigators believed that the infants were born alive. Autopsies were never able to ascertain causes of death. Officials believe that mother of the children may have hidden the pregnancies and is probably familiar with the area or possibly still living in the local areas.

After the discovery of both babies, a local couple paid to have them buried next to their own stillborn daughter, under headstones that read “God’s Little Angel.“

NCIC Number for baby number two:
U530018814 (Please refer to this number when contacting any agency with information regarding this case.)

Agency Case Number for baby number one: GO03-127
Agency Case Number fpr baby number two: GC99-158
If you have any information about these unidentified children please contact:
Minnesota Regional Medical Examiner’s Office
Lindsey Thomas
651-480-4253
You may remain anonymous when submitting information.
 

http://z10.invisionfree.com/usedtobedoe/ar/t29036.htm


http://www.twincities.com/localnews/ci_5534533

Goodhue County, Minn.
Infant's body likely in river for months
Sheriff widens investigation; couple will provide for burial

BY JOHN BREWER and RHODA FUKUSHIMA
Pioneer Press

Article Last Updated: 03/27/2007 11:33:03 PM CDT


The body of a newborn girl likely drifted in the Mississippi River for months before she was found Monday near the Treasure Island Resort Casino marina, according to the Goodhue County sheriff's office.

An initial autopsy report did not reveal the cause of the girl's death.

Scott McNurlin, chief deputy for the county, said the girl had been in the water since late fall or early winter. Injuries to the body, including broken bones, likely happened in the river.

"It changes the whole focus of the investigation," McNurlin said. Initially, investigators were looking for leads from within the past few weeks related to the dumping of the body. Now, they will expand that timeframe.

The discovery Monday marks the third time in eight years that a newborn's body has turned up on the banks of the Mississippi in Goodhue County.

In 1999, a boater found a newborn girl near a marina in Red Wing. And in 2003, a newborn boy was found near Frontenac.

NNeither child was ever identified, nor was a cause of death determined. The sheriff's office is forming a task force to review the incidents. The group will include agencies from Wisconsin, Dakota County, the city of Red Wing, the Minnesota Bureau of Criminal Apprehension and the FBI.

McNurlin said finding three bodies in the same stretch of river - albeit over an eight-year span - is "certainly an anomaly."

"It's a stretch of 15 miles, and we have three of these incidents. It's just unbelievable," McNurlin said.

Investigators don't know whether the three incidents are related. Any DNA tests would require a sample from a parent for comparison.

No parents have been identified in any of the cases.

McNurlin added that it was strange that the latest baby appeared to have been born healthy yet wasn't turned over to a hospital or government agency for care.

"That's the difficulty for the community and ourselves here. It appears to be a full-term baby," he said.

Safe Place For Newborns / Laure Krupp, executive director of Safe Place for Newborns, said the death is an unnecessary tragedy.

Under the Safe Place for Newborns law, enacted in April 2003, a mother or immediate family member of a newborn can place the unharmed child into the hands of a hospital employee on hospital grounds with complete anonymity during the first three days of the child's life.

Minnesota was the third state to adopt such legislation. Now, 47 states have similar laws.

According to Krupp, at least a dozen babies have been turned over to hospitals in Minnesota since the law took effect. Hospitals are not required to report when a child is turned over, and the state does not collect information about children turned in under the law.

Krupp said her group has compiled numbers by polling hospitals, and it gets the word out about the law by informing health care providers, schools and social service agencies.

"We wanted one more alternative to a mother placing her child in a river or a trash can," Krupp said. "Sadly, there are times people know of resources but choose not to use them."

Laying Baby Doe To Rest / Jeanne Madtson wishes the mother of the latest baby had taken advantage of the law. The Red Wing woman and her husband, Don, have stepped forward to provide burial for the abandoned girl - just as they did with the other two babies found in the river.

Pending approval of authorities, the Madtsons hope to lay the baby to rest in their family plot at Oakwood Cemetery. They buried their stillborn daughter, Ann Marie, there in 1989.

"One baby is bad enough," Jeanne Madtson said. "Then, you get two. And now three. This is just unreal. It's heartbreaking."

Madtson said she worries about the precedent.

"It's like people know 'if we drop them (babies) in the river at Red Wing, someone will take care of them,' " she said. "That's not what I want. I don't want to keep burying dead babies."

In the past, the couple received donations of money and services that helped defray burial costs, which came to about $1,200 to $1,500 in 2004, Don Madtson said. They donated the remaining proceeds to the Goodhue County sheriff's office.

"It didn't even cross my mind that this could happen again," Jeanne Madtson said.

John Brewer can be reached at 651-228-2093 or jbrewer@pioneerpress.com.

More Information

The Goodhue County sheriff's office will hold a news conference on the cases at 11 a.m. today at the county law enforcement center, 430 W. Sixth St., Red Wing.

Anyone with information about any of the cases can call the sheriff's office at 651-385-3155.

"We wanted one more alternative to a mother placing her child in a river or a trash can. Sadly, there are times people know of resources but choose not to use them."

Laure Krupp, executive director, Safe Place for Newborns
 
http://z10.invisionfree.com/usedtobedoe/ar/t29036.htm

http://www.startribune.com/local/15466916.html

Images of Red Wing infants reconstructed
Last update: February 8, 2008 - 11:37 PM


RED WING, MINN. - The Goodhue County Sheriff's Office has released composite images of three infants found dead along the Mississippi River from 1999 to 2007, hoping they will spur new leads in cases that have stymied investigators for years.

The National Center for Missing and Exploited Children created the images, which represent how the babies might have appeared in their first year. Forensic artists prepared the images based on photos that local authorities took.

"We're trying to do everything in our power and trying to think outside the box on solving this case," Sheriff's Capt. Pat Thompson told the Red Wing Republican Eagle.

Sheriff Dean Albers said he hopes one of the images might spark a memory for someone who could provide investigators with new information.

In 1999, two fishermen spotted a baby girl's body floating near Bay Point Park. Four years later, a group of teenagers discovered the body of a newborn boy along the water in Old Frontenac, Minn., and last year, two workers at a Prairie Island marina found another body of a baby girl.

Authorities believe the babies found in 1999 and 2003 probably came from the same mother. They don't believe the baby found last year is related to the first two.

Thompson said the Sheriff's Office has developed about 100 leads, and said investigators are currently working on what he called a promising lead.

ASSOCIATED PRESS
 
http://z10.invisionfree.com/usedtobedoe/ar/t29036.htm

http://kaaltv.com/article/stories/S341457.shtml?cat=10226

New Pictures in Red Wing Baby Cases

(KAAL)--- New pictures released today may bring investigators one-step closer to solving the cases of three babies, thrown into the Mississippi River.

Over the last eight years, three infants have been found dead in the waters of the river, but how they got there, and who's to blame is still a mystery.

Now pictures of what these children used to look like may help solve the case.

The pictures show the faces of the three babies found dead in the Mississippi River.

"The pictures make you stop and pause and take a look...it actually put more of a human face on it than when we found their remains before," said Goodhue County Sheriff Dean Albers.

The forensic drawings, put together by the National Center for Missing and Exploited Children, are based on the human remains of the infants found dead along the river within the last 8 years.

One infant female was found in 1999 in Red Wing.

The second baby, a boy was found in and the last baby, another female was found just last March at Treasure Island Marina.

Sheriff Albers says they have a new lead.

Earlier in the week they received a tip that someone may be linked to one of the cases.

They took DNA samples from that person and they expect to get results within 2-3 weeks.
 
http://z10.invisionfree.com/usedtobedoe/ar/t29036.htm

http://www.twincities.com/ci_8212622?source=rss

Red Wing, Minn. / Sheriff hopes images help solve mystery of 3 dead newborns
Pioneer Press

Article Last Updated: 02/09/2008 12:03:24 AM CST


The Goodhue County sheriff's office released composite sketches Friday of three babies found dead in Mississippi River waters near Red Wing the past eight years.

Sheriff Dean Albers released the images hoping someone would come forward with information.

"The idea is to put a face on these babies, to let people know that they were real people," he said.

The first baby - a newborn girl - turned up in a Red Wing marina in 1999, followed by a newborn boy in Lake Pepin in 2003 and another newborn girl in the Treasure Island Resort & Casino marina in 2007. The sheriff's office has made several appeals for information and has received about 100 leads. None has panned out.

The first two infants had the same mother and were almost certainly white, authorities concluded based on DNA tests. The third infant was not related to the first two and was most likely of American Indian descent.


Albers said his office recently has taken DNA samples from several people, including one woman.

The images were created by the National Center for Missing and Exploited Children based on photos of the dead children.

Anyone with information may contact the sheriff's office at 651-385-3155.
 
A full term infant with umbilical cord still attached was found 10 yds north of the Mississippi shore near 800 Levee Dr, Redwing MN.

RED WING JAMIE INFANT DOE: WF, newborn, found in Goodhue County, MN - 4 November 1999 Data=Uvj219S0wk7VARqc5uj7cpPyygBjVLQ2pP9sId6fehhtAcrXFgdVBdRkRLR2CgxXLdABS8msZ5NTyw5v8_f5f7_8EhPhqQzEMCD4u5__PS-w_9FGJxIfoiKE9SMXkohEVJp8u_HynXd1-Jg7QUe5uY1HZtR6gLDKfO6gOYcRi4OiEbT7z6C6lx5dWHSjRi-GKN3fPtnxfktEG5o5hXYJCA_aMgHfMjLfcNfnnKvl
 
Minnesota cold case: Mom charged in death of baby found in Mississippi River in 2003
A Red Wing-area woman has been arrested in connection to the death of a baby boy who was found in the Mississippi River in 2003. She has also been identified through DNA as the mom of a baby girl found in the river in 1999.

Jennifer Lynn Matter, 50, of Belvidere Township, was identified through DNA as the mom of the boy who was found in Lake Pepin on Dec. 7, 2003, said the Minnesota Bureau of Criminal Apprehension (BCA) on Monday. Matter was taken into custody at 6:38 a.m. on Monday at her home.

A baby girl was also found dead on Nov. 4, 1999, in the Lower Boat Harbor of the Mississippi River near Red Wing. Investigators determined through DNA the baby girl was also Matter’s child. No charges have been filed in connection to that incident at this time, with officials noting charges could be amended or added later.
 
I remember these babies as it was state news. I'm glad they found this woman. She didn't know about birth control?. No excuse for this. I don't excuse teenagers for this. Especially a grown woman more than once.
The (so-called) mother needs to be sterilized.
 
I remember these babies as it was state news. I'm glad they found this woman. She didn't know about birth control?. No excuse for this. I don't excuse teenagers for this. Especially a grown woman more than once.
birth control doesn't always work. I have 2 pill babies and a family member has 2 iud babies.
 
She's 50 now. She was approximately 27 and 31. With two other apparently healthy children.

From the link above:

Investigators interviewed Matter again on May 5, during which Matter said she was in a bad mental state in 1999, was in and out of jail, drinking too much and doing a lot of "stupid things." She said wasn't aware she was pregnant, and when she was on her way to drop off her kids, ages 2 and 5, at school and daycare, she started bleeding, charges said.

After dropping off her kids, she went to her home in Red Wing and gave birth in the bathroom, noting the baby was born blue and wasn't breathing nor crying, so she freaked out. She was scared and wrapped the baby in a towel while trying to figure out what to do, charges said. A day passed and she was drinking heavily, she said, noting she never told anyone what happened. She said she drove the baby to Bay Point Park in the middle of the night, put her in the water near the boathouses, and walked away.

She said a few days later, she heard the baby had been found, the complaint said.

When asked about the second baby, Matter said she didn't remember a second child, charges said. But later in the interview, she spontaneously said, "It was in Frontenac." She said she was "almost positive" she was at the public beach by herself when she went into labor. She said she didn't remember if she wrapped the second baby in a towel or a blanket, and didn't look at the gender of the baby but remembered leaving the baby on the beach and driving away.

She didn't call 911 but hoped someone in the nearby houses would find the baby. She said she felt the baby moving inside her but didn't tell anyone about the baby, charges said. She said she didn't think of leaving the baby somewhere safe after it was born and did not go to Frontenac knowing she was in labor, the complaint said.

During her pregnancy, she said she never intended to keep the baby, the complaint said.
 
O.K. But I hold you to a different standard. I bet this woman didn't use it. Then she should have had her tubes tied, And Burned. She is 50 now. She wasn't young when this happened. Who knows if there are more before then.
 

Red Wing Woman Pleads Not Guilty in Newborn’s Death in 1999​

The Red Wing woman who was identified earlier this year as the mother of two of the three newborn children who were found dead in the Mississippi River in southeastern Minnesota between 1999 and 2007, today entered not guilty pleas to murder charges.

52-year-old Jennifer Matter, who faces two counts of second-degree murder, appeared today in Goodhue County Court and entered the not guilty pleas following an evidentiary hearing. She is scheduled to return to court for a settlement conference in late December.

Matter was charged earlier this year after investigators used DNA evidence to identify her as the mother of a newborn girl who was found dead in the Mississippi River in Redwing on November 11, 1999. The DNA testing also identified her as the mother of a newborn boy whose remains were found in Lake Pepin at Frontenac in December 2003.

At this point, Matter has not been charged in connection with her infant son's death, which remains under investigation.

The body of a third newborn was recovered from the Mississippi River near the Treasure Island Casino in 2007. The DNA testing conducted in the case was not able to link Matter to the infant girl. Her case remains unsolved.
 

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