Security camera footage captured the shocking moment when the 32-year-old mother, accused of murdering her 3-year-old child in Paleo Faliro, coldly disposes of the empty stroller while her minor sons stand beside her. Specifically, shortly before 2 AM on Sunday, the woman from Algeria, together with her two boys, moved along the coastal road, pushing a baby stroller which—after abandoning her dead 3-year-old child on Paleo Faliro beach—was now empty.
Dead girl in Paleo Faliro: Frame-by-frame the moment mother disposes of 3-year-old’s stroller (Video)
Documentary video footage obtained by STAR shows the mother, accused of murdering the 3-year-old child in Paleo Faliro, standing behind a bus stop. She bends over the stroller, collecting items which she places in a backpack. Then, she lifts the stroller and leaves it behind bushes, out of public view. Immediately after, she waits for the bus calmly, as if nothing had happened.
Paleo Faliro: Blood stains found in 32-year-old mother’s home
For over eight hours yesterday, Coast Guard and Homicide investigators thoroughly searched the 8th floor apartment rooftop where the 32-year-old accused of her 3-year-old child’s death allegedly lived. According to SKAI, blood stains were found that are being examined to determine if they belong to the 3-year-old child and if there was indeed an accident, as the mother claimed in her initial statement to authorities.
Numerous digital evidence items were also seized from the home. As it has become known, the dress the mother wore on Saturday night was not found, which, according to authorities, shows she wanted to eliminate all evidence that would lead to her trail.
Paleo Faliro: The timeline, the prosecutor and everything the mother claimed
It should be noted that evidence leads to different conclusions from what the mother of the child found dead in Paleo Faliro claims, as there are serious indications that the death was a criminal act, according to what the forensic examination revealed, and according to Dimitris Galenteris, who spoke to ERTNews and Nina Kassimati. “Water and sand were found in the lungs,” he stated characteristically, emphasizing that “this alone indicates drowning, specifically on a beach, not in open sea.”
Mr. Kalenteridis spoke of a clear discrepancy between the findings and the mother’s version, who maintains that the child fell in the bathroom, hit their head and lost consciousness, before she transported them to the beach. As he said, “the injuries found on the skull were inflicted while alive, but are not connected to brain function disruption,” so they do not support the scenario of losing consciousness from a bathroom fall. At the same time, he referenced “serious facial injuries,” which however, according to him, “have no relation to the death mechanism” and do not confirm the mother’s claims. Mr. Galenteris also pointed out the existence of a chronic pathology, which is expected to be investigated further. As he mentioned, “the question arises as to whether the child was healthy and if this specific pathology could be connected to the mother’s motive to get rid of them.”
“We are facing an abhorrent act,” he noted emphatically, calling for thorough investigation of the death circumstances through the inquiry. “What the mother says doesn’t hold up. She needs to start telling the story as it really happened,” he concluded.