Current:Home > MyHe didn't want her to have the baby. So he poisoned their newborn's bottle with antifreeze. -NextFrontier Finance
He didn't want her to have the baby. So he poisoned their newborn's bottle with antifreeze.
View
Date:2025-04-15 20:32:44
A Georgia man convicted of poisoning his newborn baby by adding antifreeze to the child's breastmilk bottles has been sentenced to 50 years after a jury found him guilty of the crime.
Curtis Jack was convicted last week of attempted murder and first-degree child cruelty in relation to the Oct. 2, 2020 attempt on the newborn's life, which came just eight days after the child was born, the South Fulton Police Department reported.
Police Sgt. Pserda Dickerson, the lead homicide investigator on the case, told USA TODAY a jury convicted Jack Thursday following a week-long trial.
A judge sentenced Jack to 40 years in prison to be followed by 10 years of probation, Dickerson said Monday.
According to police, the baby's mother gave birth to their daughter on Sept. 24, 2020, despite Jack wanting her to terminate the pregnancy.
While the baby's mother was hospitalized after its birth, police said, Jack picked up bottles of breastmilk and delivered them to the child's grandmother who was caring for the baby while her mother recovered in the hospital.
Newborn baby drank breastmilk poisoned with antifreeze
Within less than 24 hours of drinking the milk, police wrote in a release, the newborn became “critically ill" and was suspected of being poisoned.
The baby was taken to a local hospital, where she tested positive for ethylene glycol, a chemical found in antifreeze often used in cars.
When police confronted Jack about the possibility the child was poisoned, he told detectives he added antifreeze to the breastmilk.
A warrant was then obtained and police arrested Jack on charges of criminal attempt to commit murder and cruelty to children in the first degree.
Naked teacher in car arrested:Nebraska woman arrested after police find her, teen student naked in Honda
Curtis Jack convicted of attempted murder for poisoning baby's bottle with antifreeze
During the trial, prosecutors presented testimony from the child's mother, grandmother and law enforcement officers, police said, and medical experts demonstrated "how easy it was to poison the breastmilk."
The jury found Jack guilty on both felony counts and a judge sentenced him to 50 years, 40 years of that to be served in prison.
Natalie Neysa Alund is a senior reporter for USA TODAY. Reach her at [email protected] and follow her on X @nataliealund.
veryGood! (321)
Related
- Questlove charts 50 years of SNL musical hits (and misses)
- Kim Jong Un departs Pyongyang en route to Russia, South Korean official says
- Oprah Winfrey: Envy is the great destroyer of happiness
- AP Top 25 Takeaways: Texas is ready for the SEC, but the SEC doesn’t look so tough right now
- Are Instagram, Facebook and WhatsApp down? Meta says most issues resolved after outages
- Medical debt nearly pushed this family into homelessness. Millions more are at risk
- The death toll from floods in Greece has risen to 15 after 4 more bodies found, authorities say
- AP Top 25 Takeaways: Texas is ready for the SEC, but the SEC doesn’t look so tough right now
- What to watch: O Jolie night
- Moroccan soldiers and aid teams battle to reach remote, quake-hit towns as toll rises past 2,400
Ranking
- Behind on your annual reading goal? Books under 200 pages to read before 2024 ends
- UN envoy urges donor support for battered Syria facing an economic crisis
- Ukraine: Americans back most U.S. steps for Ukraine as Republicans grow more split, CBS News poll finds
- UK leader Sunak chides China after report a UK Parliament staffer is a suspected Beijing spy
- Whoopi Goldberg is delightfully vile as Miss Hannigan in ‘Annie’ stage return
- Spain's soccer chief Luis Rubiales resigns two weeks after insisting he wouldn't step down
- The death toll from floods in Greece has risen to 15 after 4 more bodies found, authorities say
- Tennis phenom Coco Gauff wins U.S. Open at age 19
Recommendation
A South Texas lawmaker’s 15
Lahaina’s fire-stricken Filipino residents are key to tourism and local culture. Will they stay?
Police announce another confirmed sighting of escaped murderer on the run in Pennsylvania
Officials search for grizzly bear that attacked hunter near Montana's Yellow Mule Trail
Toyota to invest $922 million to build a new paint facility at its Kentucky complex
Michael Bloomberg on reviving lower Manhattan through the arts
Morocco earthquake live updates: Aftershock rocks rescuers as death toll surpasses 2,000
The first attack on the Twin Towers: A bombing rocked the World Trade Center 30 years ago