A Massachusetts woman, Dianne Curry Peck, 59, has been charged with murdering her newborn son, whose death in 1985 led to the child being known as 'Baby Boy Doe.' Peck appeared in court and pleaded not guilty to the murder charge. Authorities revealed that DNA from a soda bottle found in her trash linked her to the child, after investigators used forensic genetic genealogy to reopen the cold case. The infant's body was discovered in 1985 by a hunting father and son, and an autopsy confirmed the child was born alive before dying shortly afterward. Peck, then 17, reportedly gave birth to the child in the back seat of her ex-boyfriend's car and claimed she gave the baby to him for adoption, believing it to be a girl. The case was solved after decades due to advancements in forensic techniques.
Ocena pristranskosti (Desno): The article frames the case through a moralistic lens, emphasizing the emotional impact of the crime and using language that portrays the defendant as a neglectful mother. It highlights the role of law enforcement and forensic science in solving the case, which aligns with conservative values of law
Zakaj te ocene (Dejstva 75 · Objektivnost 60): Factuality is moderate as the article presents details from the primary source document including the DNA evidence and the case background. However, it lacks specific information about the DNA link and omits key context like the error message. Objectivity is low due to emotionally charged language s






