Current location:Stellar Station news portal > world
Cruise worker 'murders newborn son on board ship': Shocked co
Stellar Station news portal2024-05-21 18:28:39【world】1People have gathered around
IntroductionA cruise worker on board an Italian ship 'murdered her newborn son' as horrified co-workers raised t
A cruise worker on board an Italian ship 'murdered her newborn son' as horrified co-workers raised the alarm as the vessel sailed off the coast of Argentario, Tuscany.
The Filipino, 28, was a member of the cabin crew on board the cruise ship and according to her colleagues, she had kept her pregnancy hidden.
In a horror set of events, the woman had allegedly been in a cabin when other staff heard piercing cries coming from the room.
They realised something was wrong when the wails stopped and didn't pick back up.
Fearing the worst, the panicked crew members immediately called the police.
A cruise ship worker, 28, 'murdered her newborn son on board the vessel' in Tuscany before police found the infant's body in a cabin she shared with other ship staff. Pictured: Argentario, Tuscany
Police scrambled to the ship in a patrol boat and officers searched through the cabin and other rooms within the ship as they carried out photographic surveys.
The newborn's body was discovered in the cabin that the mother shared with other crew personnel.
After finding the new mother, who was reportedly in a confused state, she was taken to the emergency room in Grosseto, Tuscany.
On Monday morning, the Grosseto prosecutor's office arrested the woman who is accused of voluntary homicide.
The unnamed woman gave birth to the little boy about two days before allegedly killing him, police said.
The child's body is in the morgue and an autopsy is set to be arranged.
The autopsy will also establish whether the woman was in her final month of pregnancy or whether the newborn was premature.
According to an initial external examination, the death of the infant was not caused by suffocation or strangulation, but is thought to have been left alone inside the three-by-two metre cabin for hours with no milk or medical care.
Cops spoke to several crew members following the tragic incident - and they all revealed they had no idea the woman was pregnant.
Colleagues explained that their stomachs would not be visible on sailing days under uniform and they hadn't witnessed her suffering with any illnesses or sickness related to pregnancy in public.
Police are also believed to have verified the witness statements with photos of the team members on their mobile phones - to see whether the woman appeared pregnant in any images.
After the authorities had carried out their checks on board the ship, the vessel resumed its scheduled navigation.
The motive behind the tragic murder is not yet currently known, but police are continuing their investigations into the case.
Address of this article:http://ethiopia.cezaryphotography.com/news-18e599458.html
Address of this article:http://ethiopia.cezaryphotography.com/news-18e599458.html
Very good!(623)
Related articles
- Brazil replaces injured goalkeeper Ederson in Copa America squad
- Trump sues Truth Social co
- Taiwan earthquake rescuers face threat of landslides, rockfalls as death toll at 12
- Six months into Gaza war, Israel faces deepening isolation
- Biden says Brown v. Board of Education ruling was about more than education
- Government likened to 'dinosaurs behaving as though it's 1948' over te reo Māori use
- Cluster fears over new HK virus cases
- Shulan coronavirus: Fears new wave about to hit China
- Siblings trying to make US water polo teams for Paris Olympics
- 40 earthquake
Popular articles
Recommended
Investigators return to Long Island home of Gilgo Beach serial killing suspect
Worldwide coronavirus deaths exceed 16,500
Fire crews put out Ōtaki workshop blaze
Close to 200kg of methamphetamine stopped from entering NZ, Australia market
Rangers are undefeated at .500 to keep World Series champs from a losing record with Bochy
Hong Kong anthem bill passed amid protest
Security law: Hong Kong's artists resist censorship, continue sharing dissident art online
HKFP Lens: HKU shares 3,000 images of colonial Hong Kong from the Frank Fischbeck collection
Links
- Philadelphia still the 6th
- National political themes will lead off the campaign for Pennsylvania's next attorney general
- Russia expels British defense attaché in a tit
- FDIC chair is grilled on Capitol Hill after report outlines agency's toxic workplace culture
- Leonardo DiCaprio's girlfriend Vittoria Ceretti, 25, oils up for a racy Marc Jacobs campaign
- United Airlines says it has regained some privileges that were suspended after problem flights
- Revealed: Bridgerton's most regal filming locations for season three, including real
- Louisville native Justin Thomas has work to do at PGA Championship, but 2
- Sexual assaults are down in the US military. Here's what to know
- Murder charge against Chad Daybell will stand despite wrong date of child's death, judge says