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Detectives never gave up solving the case of a baby's remains found under the Moses Statue in September 1997 in Albany's Washington Park. DNA evidence eventually led them to Keri Mazzuca.
Detectives never gave up solving the case of a baby's remains found under the Moses Statue in September 1997 in Albany's Washington Park. DNA evidence eventually led them to Keri Mazzuca.
The child’s remains were found by city workers on Sept. 7, 1997, near the base of the park’s Moses statue. Investigators named the infant “Baby Moses. ...
She placed his body in a burnt cloth in a flowerbed close to the Moses statue in Albany, New York. A Freedom of Information Law request led to the release of the police interview. Mazzuca was ...
She then admitted to wrapping up the child’s body and discarding it near the statue of Moses in Washington Park. DNA analysis of evidence led to Mazzuca’s arrest in September 2024 , 27 years ...
Decision to remove a statue of Moses opposite the famous Altneu synagogue in Prague and a plan to melt it down for war purposes, is reported by Der Neue Tag, ...
Keri Mazzuca sentenced to 25 years in prison for the 1997 death of her newborn. Investigators named the infant Baby Moses because his remains were found near the Moses statue in Washington Park ...
Keri Mazzuca was sentenced Friday in Albany County Court for the death of her newborn, an infant found beneath Washington Park’s Moses statue 27 years ago.
Keri Mazzuca, 52, of Altamont, has been charged in the 1997 Baby Moses case where an infant was found wrapped in a pillowcase near the Moses statue in Albany’s Washington Park.