Cheerleader's disturbing texts to mum after allegedly killing baby

The cheerleader on trial for allegedly killing her baby sent disturbing text messages hours after the baby was born.

Brooke Skylar Richardson, now 20-years-old, is on trial and accused of aggravated murder and four other felonies in the 2017 birth and death of her baby girl.

The remains of Richardson’s daughter, who Richardson named “Annabelle”, were found in a shallow grave in her backyard in Ohio.

Richardson messaged her mother just hours after the alleged murder, saying she was happy with her post-baby body, Ohio news publication the Journal-News reported.

Brooke Skylar Richardson is accused of murdering her baby in 2017. Source: Nick Graham/The Journal-News via AP, Pool.
Brooke Skylar Richardson is accused of murdering her baby in 2017. Source: Nick Graham/The Journal-News via AP, Pool.

“I am literally speechless with how happy I am my belly is back OMG,” she texted her mother, Assistant Warren County Prosecutor Steven Knippen told the jury during the second day of Richardson’s trial.

“Brooke Richardson murdered a baby she didn’t want and never intended to keep,” Kippen said.

“Upon finding out she was pregnant by a boy she wanted nothing to do with, Brooke Richardson burst into tears and told the doctor that she cannot have this baby.”

Attorney Charles M Rittgers rejected prosecution claims that Richardson confessed, saying it was a false confession that police pressured her to say the baby was born alive and she burned it.

The remains of Richardson's baby were found July 14 near a home in Carlisle, about 64 kilometers north of Cincinnati.  Source: FOX19 NOW/Michael Buckingham via AP.
The remains of Richardson's baby were found July 14 near a home in Carlisle, about 64 kilometers north of Cincinnati. Source: FOX19 NOW/Michael Buckingham via AP.

In spring 2017, Richardson was an 18-year-old Carlisle High School cheerleader when a doctor confirmed that she was pregnant. By that summer, she would be accused of murder.

Prosecution witness Dr William Andrew testified that when he informed her on April 26 she was pregnant.

“I can’t have a baby! I’m going to college,” Richardson said, according to Dr Andrew’s testimony.

Prosecutors said she soon began plotting “how to get rid of a baby”, even searching the internet for ideas.

That July 12, Richardson went back to the same medical practice office for a birth control prescription refill.

While she was there, Dr Casey Boyce noted that records showed Richardson had been pregnant during her last visit in April.

Dr Boyce has testified that Richardson burst into tears and said: “I had it [the baby] alone in my house and I buried it in my backyard”.

Richardson has maintained her innocence, saying she gave birth to was stillborn, two days after her senior prom, on May 7 2017.

Dr Boyce recalled this exchange with Richardson, asking her if she was the first person she had told about the baby - to which Richardson replied “yes”.

If convicted, Richardson could face life in prison.

The trial is ongoing and could last up to three weeks.

-With AP

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