| Tuesday, November 23, 2004   
                  PLANO, 
                  Texas — With a calm and dispassionate voice and a 
                  hymn playing in the background, Dena Schlosser (search) confessed to the unthinkable, 
                  telling a 911 operator she'd cut off the arms of her baby 
                  girl. The woman was sitting in her living room covered with blood 
                  when police arrived Monday. Her nearly 11-month-old daughter 
                  lay fatally injured in a crib in a bedroom of the family's 
                  apartment in Plano. The child died shortly afterward at a 
                  nearby hospital. Police have charged the 35-year-old mother with capital 
                  murder, but declined to reveal where she is being held. Schlosser, who had a history of postpartum depression, had 
                  been investigated on child neglect allegations earlier this 
                  year, but Texas Child Protective Services (search) had recently closed a seven-month 
                  investigation, concluding that Schlosser did not pose a risk 
                  to her children. Neighbors said she seemed to be a loving, 
                  attentive mother. "There were never any indications of violence with this 
                  family," agency spokeswoman Marissa Gonzales said. "The 
                  children had always been healthy, happy and cared for." But, on Monday, authorities discovered a grisly scene at 
                  the family's apartment after the child's father called a 
                  day-care center, and asked them to check on his wife and 
                  daughter. Day-care workers called 911 after talking to the mother; an 
                  operator then called Schlosser. Asked if there was an emergency, Schlosser calmly responded 
                  "Yes," according to 911 tapes released by police. "Exactly what happened?" the 911 operator asked. "I cut her arms off," Schlosser replied, as the hymn "He 
                  Touched Me" played in the background. "You cut her arms off?" he repeated. "Uh huh," she answered. It was not immediately clear what instrument was used to 
                  sever the baby's arms or why the child's father called a 
                  day-care center to check on his family. Schlosser lived at the apartment with other family members, 
                  including her two older daughters. Authorities said the girls, 
                  ages 6 and 9, were at school when police arrived, and that 
                  their father was at work. No one answered the door Monday night at the family's 
                  apartment in suburban Dallas. Children's bicycles rested near 
                  the entrance along with angel garden statues. Neighbors said Schlosser took her children swimming in the 
                  summer, had picnics in the courtyard and walked her baby 
                  around the complex the same time each afternoon. Dena Livingston, 43, said she saw Schlosser making her 
                  rounds with the stroller on Sunday. Two days earlier, she saw 
                  Schlosser waiting with the baby outside the elementary school 
                  where her two other daughters attend. "She didn't give off like she was in a distant world or 
                  didn't care about the baby," Livingston said. Livingston's husband, Brad, added: "To see her with the 
                  girls, you would just think she was a great mother." Child-protective officials were interviewing Schlosser's 
                  daughters and would talk to the father before deciding whether 
                  to remove the girls from the home. In January, the agency was called to the home after 
                  Schlosser was seen running down the street, with one of her 
                  daughters bicycling after her, authorities said. When 
                  officials arrived, the child told them her mother had left her 
                  6-day-old sister alone in the apartment. Schlosser appeared at the time to be suffering from 
                  postpartum depression and having a psychotic episode, Gonzales 
                  said. Schlosser was hospitalized, and later agreed to seek 
                  counseling and saw a psychiatrist, Gonzales said. "At the time we closed the case, we had been assured that 
                  Mom was stabilized and that she was not a risk to herself or 
                  her children," Geoff Wool, spokesman for the Family and 
                  Protective Services Department, said. |