Current:Home > NewsDaughter of Hall of Fame pitcher Dennis Eckersley says she thought baby died after she gave birth -EverVision Finance
Daughter of Hall of Fame pitcher Dennis Eckersley says she thought baby died after she gave birth
FinLogic FinLogic Quantitative Think Tank Center View
Date:2025-04-11 02:47:48
CONCORD, N.H. (AP) — The daughter of baseball Hall of Fame pitcher Dennis Eckersley testified at her trial Wednesday that she didn’t know she was pregnant when she gave birth in the woods in subfreezing temperatures on Christmas night in 2022 and thought her baby had died.
Alexandra Eckersley, 27, was homeless at the time and living in a tent in Manchester, New Hampshire. A forensic psychologist testified earlier Wednesday that Eckersley was suffering from mental health and developmental issues diagnosed since childhood, as well as substance abuse disorder. She was not being treated for those conditions at the time. Her trial started July 25.
Prosecutors said her son was left alone for more than an hour as temperatures dipped to 15 degrees Fahrenheit (minus 9.4 degrees Celsius) and suffered respiratory distress and hypothermia.
Eckersley pleaded not guilty to charges of assault, reckless conduct, falsifying evidence and endangering the welfare of a child.
She said she started having stomach pains earlier that day and thought she was constipated, but didn’t feel any better after a man who was staying with her gave her ibuprofen and medicine for an upset stomach.
“It felt like a knife stabbing into my stomach,” Eckersley said of the pain.
She said didn’t know what labor pains felt like. When asked by her attorney, Kim Kossick, when she realized she had been pregnant she said, “when the baby came out of me.”
She said she didn’t look at her baby and asked the man to take his pulse because she didn’t know how. “He said there was no pulse,” Eckersley said.
She had been bleeding and said she and the man decided to call for help, but had no cellphone service. They started walking toward an ice arena. On their way, Alexandra Eckersley experienced afterbirth. She testified she thought she was having a second child.
The baby was left in the tent.
“Did it occur to you to pick him up and bring him with you?” Kossick asked.
“No,” Eckersley said.
“Why not?”
“Well, I thought he was dead.”
Eckersley told a 911 dispatcher that she had given birth to two children, and that one had lived for less than a minute, and the other died immediately, her lawyers said.
Prosecutor Alexander Gatzoulis said Eckersley intentionally led first responders to a different location, because she did not want to get into trouble and did not tell them at first that the baby had cried after she gave birth. She was the only one who could lead them to the baby because the man had left, he said.
“You did not tell them where the baby was,” he said.
“That is correct,” Eckersley said.
She also said “correct” when Gatzoulis said she didn’t tell the dispatcher or the first responders that the baby had cried, and that she said she would give an officer a call when the baby was found.
“Essentially what you were telling them is that they could stop searching and you would get back to them if you found the baby,” Gatzoulis said.
“It’s not what I meant by it, but potentially, that could be taken that way,” she said.
Eventually, Eckersley took them to the tent, where they found the baby, alive.
On redirect, Eckersley said she knew some of the statements she made to police at the time were wrong, but that she didn’t know that. She said she was afraid of the man she was staying with. He was arrested along with Eckersley and was sentenced last August to a year in jail after pleading guilty to a child endangerment charge.
Eckersley has been living full-time with her son and family in Massachusetts since earlier this year.
The Eckersley family released a statement shortly after she was arrested, saying they had no prior knowledge of her pregnancy and were in complete shock. The family said she has suffered from “severe mental illness her entire life” and that they did their very best to get her help and support.
Dennis Eckersley, who attended the trial this week, was drafted by Cleveland out of high school in 1972 and went on to pitch 24 seasons for Cleveland, Boston, Chicago, Oakland and St. Louis. He won the AL Cy Young and MVP awards in 1992 while playing for the Oakland Athletics. After his playing days, Eckersley retired in 2022 from broadcasting Boston Red Sox games.
veryGood! (522)
Related
- Dick Vitale announces he is cancer free: 'Santa Claus came early'
- Who could Kamala Harris pick as her VP? Here are 10 potential running mates
- 3 Army Reserve officers disciplined after reservist killed 18 people last October in Maine
- Sam Smith couldn't walk for a month after a skiing accident: 'I was an idiot'
- Pregnant Kylie Kelce Shares Hilarious Question Her Daughter Asked Jason Kelce Amid Rising Fame
- Love Island USA's Kendall Washington Addresses Leaked NSFW Video
- Man is arrested in the weekend killing of a Detroit-area police officer
- Oscar Mayer Wienermobile in rollover wreck in Illinois, no injuries reported
- Nearly 400 USAID contract employees laid off in wake of Trump's 'stop work' order
- Blake Lively and Gigi Hadid Shut Down the Deadpool Red Carpet in Matching BFF Outfits
Ranking
- EU countries double down on a halt to Syrian asylum claims but will not yet send people back
- Repercussions rare for violating campaign ethics laws in Texas due to attorney general’s office
- Rapper Snoop Dogg to carry Olympic torch ahead of Paris opening ceremony
- Stock market today: Asian shares are mixed after Wall Street breaks losing streak
- North Carolina trustees approve Bill Belichick’s deal ahead of introductory news conference
- New Federal Grants Could Slash U.S. Climate Emissions by Nearly 1 Billion Metric Tons Through 2050
- Netflix plans documentary on Michigan Wolverines football sign-stealer
- Harris to visit battleground Wisconsin in first rally as Democrats coalesce around her for president
Recommendation
NHL in ASL returns, delivering American Sign Language analysis for Deaf community at Winter Classic
Israel shoots down missile fired from Yemen after deadly Israeli strike on Houthi rebels
Delta faces federal investigation as it scraps hundreds of flights for fifth straight day
In Washington state, Inslee’s final months aimed at staving off repeal of landmark climate law
Charges tied to China weigh on GM in Q4, but profit and revenue top expectations
Beyoncé's mom, Tina Knowles, endorses VP Kamala Harris for president
Emma Hayes realistic about USWNT work needed to get back on top of world. What she said
U.S. stocks little moved by potential Harris run for president against Trump