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Woman who killed newborn twins seeks new trial


NASHVILLE — A Tennessee woman who smothered her newborn twins to death in 2011 is seeking a new trial, arguing that key evidence should not have been used against her.

That evidence was 25-year-old Lindsey Lowe’s confession to police just a day after she gave birth to two boys in a toilet of her Hendersonville home in September 2011. Lowe told police, according to court documents, that she put her hand over one baby’s mouth until the infant stopped crying, and then did the same to the second child.

In front of three judges of the Tennessee Court of Criminal Appeals on Tuesday, Lowe’s appellate attorney, David Raybin, argued that statement never should have been used at the first trial. Sumner County Judge Dee David Gay allowed the statement to be used, ruling that Lowe gave it voluntarily.

But Raybin said Hendersonville police used “coercion and trickery” to get Lowe to make the statement.

He said officers did not properly read Lowe her Miranda rights, including the right to an attorney and to remain silent, and steamrolled through her questions about whether she should have an attorney present. He said Lowe never waived those rights, and when officers did not get answers they wanted, they asked questions another way.

Assistant Attorney General Leslie Price said Lowe’s convictions should stand. She said the officers twice read Lowe her rights, and according to case law, Lowe waived those rights when she continued to talk. She said Lowe was not in custody, agreed to go to the police station and was free to leave at any time.

“The Supreme Court held that when a defendant is advised of their rights, and it's clear they understood their rights — and she did, she said that she did — when that defendant agrees to talk, that’s an implicit waiver," Price said.

Appeals court judges will review hundreds of pages of court records and decide whether to grant Lowe a new trial. Among the things they will consider are recordings of how police read Lowe her rights and Lowe's response.

Lowe, now 28, is serving a more than 50-year sentence at the Tennessee Prison for Women in Nashville. A jury found her guilty of two counts each of first-degree murder and aggravated child abuse in March 2013.

At the sentencing hearing a month later, Lowe's father, Mark, was among those who spoke on her behalf, saying he would trust his life to Lowe. Several members of Lowe’s family, including her father, attended Tuesday’s hearing but did not speak to the media.

Lowe's father alerted Hendersonville police in September 2011 after the babies' bodies and bloody towels were found in Lowe’s laundry basket at the family's home.

Lowe told police that no one knew she was pregnant, and even she thought she was having a bowel movement when she gave birth to two boys, according to court documents. The 6 1/2-pound boys lived for only five minutes. During trial, it was alleged Lowe killed the babies to conceal her pregnancy from her family and her fiance, who was not the father.