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The Spokesman-Review Newspaper
Spokane, Washington  Est. May 19, 1883

Woman’s children drowned, hidden

Jim Suhr Associated Press

EAST ST. LOUIS, Ill. – A woman accused of killing a pregnant woman and her fetus told police she drowned the woman’s three young children and stuffed them into a washer and dryer at their apartment, an official said Sunday.

Preliminary autopsies on the dead children Sunday appear to show they were drowned, said Ace Hart, a deputy St. Clair County coroner.

As of Sunday, Tiffany Hall, 24, had not been charged in the children’s deaths, but prosecutors on Saturday accused Hall of killing their mother, Jimella Tunstall, 23, and her fetus. The fetus had been cut from her womb, authorities said.

According to Sunday’s autopsies, there were no signs of physical abuse or trauma on the children – ages 7, 2, and 1 – and toxicology tests were pending “to see if they were poisoned or possibly drugged,” Hart said.

“They were not drowned there in the wash machine,” Hart stressed.

On Sunday, the community turned to prayer to understand the slayings at a service for the slain family.

Authorities suspect Tunstall was slain on or about Sept. 15.

That day, Hall summoned police to a park, saying she had given birth to a stillborn child, Hart said. She was arrested after she told her boyfriend during the baby’s funeral that the baby wasn’t his and that she had killed the mother to get it, authorities said.

Tunstall’s body was found Thursday, and authorities began a furious search for her children. Police said the children were last seen with Hall on Monday.

Authorities had visited Tunstall’s apartment Friday but noticed nothing amiss while looking for photographs of the children for media outlets to publicize in their search, Hart said.

While in custody, Hart says, Hall told investigators she killed the children at another location, then hauled them home and hid them in the washer and dryer.

Hall said he understood why investigators may have overlooked the children during their previous trip to the apartment. “Who would be looking in the washer and dryer?”

By Saturday night, Hart said, “you could find them by the smell.”

Hall remained jailed Sunday on $5 million bond, charged with first-degree murder in Tunstall’s death and with intentional homicide of an unborn child.

Relatives say Tunstall grew up with Hall and had let her baby-sit her children. Hall has two children of her own. Illinois State Police Capt. Craig Koehler said they are “safe and sound.”

Hall likely will be arraigned Monday on the two charges, each carrying a sentence of 20 to 60 years or life in prison, prosecutors said. The murder count could be punishable by the death penalty.