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Snohomish County woman arrested in 2005 death of newborn found in a Phoenix airport trash can

AP FILE - A sign displays an unofficial temperature as jets taxi at Sky Harbor International Airport at dusk, July 12, 2023, in Phoenix. Arizona’s Maricopa County, the hottest metropolitan area in the U.S. and home to Phoenix, set a new record Thursday, Oct. 19, 2023, for annual heat-associated deaths. County officials said the 425 deaths were confirmed as of Oct. 14. Another 199 deaths remain under investigation. (AP Photo/Matt York, File) (Matt York/AP)

For nearly two decades, it was a mystery who had left “Baby Skylar” — an unidentified newborn found dead inside a Phoenix airport trash can.

On Tuesday, Phoenix authorities announced that the infant’s mother, 51-year-old Annie Anderson, was arrested in Snohomish County after DNA and genealogical research helped investigators crack the case.

Police said Anderson is awaiting extradition to Arizona, where she is facing a first-degree murder charge after investigators secured an arrest warrant from a Maricopa County grand jury.

It wasn’t immediately clear Tuesday if Anderson has a lawyer yet who can speak on her behalf.

Phoenix police also said they didn’t immediately know if Anderson has a criminal history or how many years she has been living in Washington.

Detectives began their investigation after the baby girl was found dead and wrapped in newspaper and a black plastic bag in a woman’s restroom at Phoenix Sky Harbor International Airport on Oct. 10, 2005.

“The evidence at the scene indicated that the birth likely did not occur at the airport, and the bathroom was where the baby was abandoned by the suspects or the suspect,” Phoenix police Lt. James Hester said at Tuesday’s news conference.

Hester, who is part of the police department’s homicide unit, said “Baby Skylar” was born alive. He said the medical examiner concluded that the death was a homicide and that the baby had been suffocated.

Police said the case went cold for years before DNA evidence saved from the crime scene and genealogical research led to a possible match in 2021.

In January 2022, authorities went to Washington to interview Anderson and “she identified herself as the mother of the victim” Hester said.

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