Bridgeport, CT – Suspect in 1987 NYC Kidnapping Surrenders to Police

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    This poster released by the National Center for Missing and Exploited Children shows Carlina White as an infant, left, and what she might have looked like as an adult, right.  White, who was kidnapped 23 years ago as an infant from a Harlem hospital bed and raised under a different name, was reunited with her birth mother on Saturday, Jan. 15, 2011. (AP Photo/The National Center For Missing and Exploited Children)Bridgeport, CT – A North Carolina woman who raised a child kidnapped 23 years ago from a New York hospital surrendered to authorities on a probation violation charge Sunday, days after a widely publicized reunion between the biological mother and the daughter taken from her as a baby.

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    Ann Pettway surrendered Sunday morning to the FBI and Bridgeport police on a warrant from North Carolina, where she’s on probation because of a conviction for attempted embezzlement, FBI supervisory special agent William Reiner said.

    Pettway received two years of probation last June after she took items from a store where she worked, which is considered embezzlement under North Carolina law, state correction spokeswoman Pamela Walker said. Under terms of her probation, she wasn’t allowed to leave the state.

    Department of Correction officials there tried repeatedly to contact her after finding out investigators wanted to question her in the 1987 abduction of Carlina White.

    North Carolina officials said Friday they believed Pettway was on the run from authorities. They said Sunday they would seek her extradition.

    Carlina was just 19 days old when her parents took her to Harlem Hospital in the middle of the night with a high fever. Joy White and Carl Tyson said a woman who looked like a nurse had comforted them. The couple left the hospital to rest, but their baby was missing when they went back. No suspects were identified.

    Carlina is now 23 and has been living under the name Nejdra Nance in Connecticut and in the Atlanta area. She said she had long suspected Pettway wasn’t her biological mother because she could never provide her with a birth certificate and because she didn’t look like anyone else in Pettway’s family.

    She periodically checked the website of the National Center for Missing and Exploited Children and while looking through New York photos early this month found one that looked nearly identical to her own baby picture. She contacted Joy White through the center.

    White and Nance met in New York before DNA tests were complete, confident they were mother and daughter. After the test results confirmed it Wednesday, Nance returned from Atlanta to be with White again.

    Pettway remained in custody Sunday and couldn’t be reached for comment. Nobody answered when a reporter on Friday knocked on the door of a house where Pettway lived in Raleigh, N.C. A woman who answered the phone at a Pettway relative’s home in Bridgeport refused to comment on her surrender.

    Nance told the New York Post in an interview posted Thursday that reuniting with her family was like a dream.

    “I’m so happy,” she said. “At the same time, it’s a funny feeling because everything’s brand new. It’s like being born again.”

    Authorities are considering whether federal investigators should take the case because the statute of limitations may have expired in New York, New York Police Department chief spokesman Paul Browne said. There is no limitation in federal missing-children cases.

    A woman who lives near Pettway in North Carolina, Sonova Smith, said Pettway mentioned that she had a daughter in Connecticut but had moved to Raleigh with her son. Smith and Pettway both had teenage sons who would often play together, and Smith said her neighbor seemed to be a good mother.

    “She was friendly. She was kind. She loved her son,” Smith said. “We talked about our boys often. She talked about family. So, it’s just really been surprising.”


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    13 years ago

    Something’s very wrong with a woman who could consciously steal another woman’s baby and think nothing of raising the infant as her own, all the while knowing that her unconscionable act has ripped open the hearts of the child’s biological parents — a wound that would never heal or stop bleeding. Heaven shield us against the callous and heartless who walk among us disguised as “good” people…

    13 years ago

    I hope that the kidnapper is sentenced to life in prison. I’m sure that she will employ a battery of shrinks to show how allegedly disturbed she was. In the end, it won’t do her any good.

    yaakov doe
    Member
    yaakov doe
    13 years ago

    I wonder if the kidnap victim now looks anything like the “aged” photo based on the baby photo?

    13 years ago

    That baby does not look like a 19 day old. Unless that’s also an aged photo.