Police Say Woman Killed Baby, Ate Brain
SAN ANTONIO (July 27) - The scene was so gruesome investigators could barely speak: A 3½-week-old boy lay dismembered in the bedroom of a single-story house, three of his tiny toes chewed off, his face torn away, his head severed and his brains ripped out.
"At this particular scene you could have heard a pin drop," San Antonio Police Chief William McManus said Monday. "No one was speaking. It was about as somber as it could have been."
Skip over this content
Parent Criminal Cases
Eva Ruth Moravec, San Antonio Express-News/A26 photos
San Antonio police stand outside a home where a 3 1/2-week-old baby was decapitated and dismembered Sunday. Otty Sanchez, 33, was charged with capital murder in the death of her son, Scott Wesley Buchholtz-Sanchez. Police said Sanchez told them the devil told her to kill her baby and that she ate parts of his body, including his brain.
Parent Criminal Cases
San Antonio police stand outside a home where a 3 1/2-week-old baby was decapitated and dismembered Sunday. Otty Sanchez, 33, was charged with capital murder in the death of her son, Scott Wesley Buchholtz-Sanchez. Police said Sanchez told them the devil told her to kill her baby and that she ate parts of his body, including his brain.
Officers called to the home early Sunday found the boy's mother, Otty Sanchez, sitting on the couch with a self-inflicted wound to her chest and her throat partially slashed, screaming "I killed my baby! I killed my baby!" police said. She told officers the devil made her do it, police said.
Sanchez, 33, apparently ate the child's brain and some other body parts before stabbing herself, McManus said.
"It's too heinous for me to describe it any further," McManus told reporters.
Sanchez is charged with capital murder in the death of her son, Scott Wesley Buccholtz-Sanchez. She was being treated Monday at a hospital, and was being held on $1 million bail.
The slaying occurred a week after the child's father moved out, McManus said. Otty Sanchez's sister and her sister's two children, ages 5 and 7, were in the house, but none were harmed.
Skip over this content
Police said Sanchez did not have an attorney, and they declined to identify family members.
No one answered the door Monday at Sanchez's home, where the blinds were shut. A hopscotch pattern and red hearts were drawn on the walk leading up to the house.
Sanchez's aunt, Gloria Sanchez, said her niece had been "in and out" of a psychiatric ward but did not say where she was treated or why. She said a hospital called several months ago to check up on her.
"Otty didn't mean to do that. She was not in her right mind," a sobbing Gloria Sanchez told The Associated Press on Monday by phone. She said her family was devastated.
Investigators are looking into Sanchez's mental health history to see if there was anything "significant," and whether postpartum difficulties could have factored into the attack, McManus said.
Postpartum depression and psychosis have been cited as contributing factors in several other cases.