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Olivia K. Gant (June 21, 2010 – August 20, 2017) [1] was a 7-year-old American girl who died after ongoing medical abuse by her mother, Kelly Renee Turner-Gant, in what was deemed to be a case of Munchausen by proxy. Turner-Gant had initially taken the girl to the hospital for a case of severe constipation; after this was treated successfully ...
MOM: The Killer (2011), written by detective Mark Gado, probes the mind of Marybeth Tinning and the neglect and unsolved deaths of her children. [49] Investigative author Joyce Egginton details the case in her book, From Cradle to Grave: The Short Lives and Strange Deaths of Marybeth Tinning's Nine Children (1990). [17]
Olivia Gant: died from the removal of her feeding tubes after years of medical abuse by her mother, Kelly Renee Turner-Gant; Turner-Gant was convicted in 2022. [4] Julie Gregory: childhood victim of her mother's Munchausen by proxy, which she survived and later documented in her memoir, Sickened: The Memoir of a Munchausen by Proxy Childhood.
In 1991, after Holloway's daughter Shanna narrowly missed out on a spot on her junior high school squad two consecutive years, Holloway's ex-brother-in-law, Terry Harper, reported to police that Holloway asked him to hire a hitman to kill Verna Heath, mother of the 14-year-old girl who had beaten Shanna onto the squad.
the biological mother of John L. Goldwater, one of the three co-founders of Archie Comics; Jean Webster (1916), author; Elnora Dickerson (1916), first wife of Benjamin O. Davis Sr. the biological mother of Budd Boetticher (1916) Anna Uelsmann (1919), Mother of Maurice Hilleman (she died 2 days after his twin sister’s stillbirth) Julia Petta ...
Did Tina Turner have any kids? Yes. In fact, Tina had four! Her sons were named Craig, Ike Jr., Michael, and Ronnie. Only two of the boys, Craig and Ronnie, were her biological children.
In 1994, Hoyt confessed to the deaths of her five children, was arrested, convicted as a murderer, and died in prison from cancer four years later in 1998. The last two biological Hoyt children, Molly and Noah, were subjects of pediatric research conducted by Dr. Alfred Steinschneider, who published an article in 1972 in the journal Pediatrics ...
Carol Scott Carr (born 1939) is an American woman from the state of Georgia who became the center of a widely publicized debate over euthanasia when she killed her two adult sons because they had Huntington's disease. [1] [2]