Betty Ann Kirk wanted everyone to know about her new baby. She called the restaurant where her husband works. She passed out photographs of herself and the infant girl to members of her clown club.
Police were sending out their own pictures, a composite sketch of the woman they believed shot a 33-year-old mother in the back of the head and fled with her newborn daughter.This week, state prosecutors are expected to seek a first-degree murder and kidnapping indictment against Kirk - known as "Sweetheart" the clown - who concealed her latest miscarriage for months and may have combed birth announcements looking for a baby to snatch.
"In my right mind, I would have never expected anything like this," said Kirk's husband, Craig, who has not been charged.
Kirk, 31, who has two children at home, is just the latest of dozens of women who suffered miscarriages then were arrested on charges of kidnapping a baby.
A bloodhound was used in February to track down a New York City woman who police say was depressed over a miscarriage and took a 3-day-old boy from a hospital maternity ward. In May 1988, a Maryland jury convicted a woman of smuggling a 3-week-old boy from a hospital in a canvas bag. She kept the baby four months.
Kirk lives in North Fort Myers, a 20-mile drive from Sharon Lynn Parker's ranch-style home on a dead-end street in Lehigh Acres.
Parker gave birth to the 7-pound girl March 19 and took out an announcement in local newspapers.
A neighbor walking her dog March 29 noticed a dark-haired woman pull into the Parkers' driveway and knock on the front door shortly before 10 a.m., according to a police affidavit.
About six hours later, Parker's three older children returned home from school and found their mother's body slumped into a reclining chair. Their infant sister, Julie Lynn, was missing.
Soon, Lee County sheriff deputies were receiving reports from people who were suspicious of the sudden appearance of Kirk's baby, even though for months she had boasted of her pregnancy.
The day after the slaying, police questioned Kirk, who insisted she had given birth at a Fort Myers clinic and went home several hours later. Her husband appeared bewildered by the suddenness of the delivery but said he believed his wife's story, according to police reports.
The clinic had no record of a baby girl being born that day, police said.
Later that night, Kirk was stopped driving away from her home, a worn trailer. Her husband asleep, Kirk had sneaked out, leaving behind the baby and a note to her husband.
"I left you some signed checks," it read in part. "I'm leaving you because I love you too much."
In addition to first-degree murder, Kirk was charged with kidnapping and a felony weapons count. She could receive the death penalty if convicted.
Kirk's husband believes frustration was building over their inability to have children since their 1983 marriage.