Morbid - Episode 588: The Disappearance of Delimar Vera
Episode Date: August 5, 2024On December 15, 1997, ten-day-old Delimar Vera died in a tragic housefire when the Philadelphia home of Luz Cuevas and Pedro Vera caught fire unexpectedly. After a brief investigation, the fi...re department identified a faulty heater as the cause of the fire and deemed the baby’s death an accident and claimed that the girl’s remains had been completely destroyed in the blaze. Luz Cuevas was skeptical of their explanation and struggled to accept her daughter’s death.Six years after the fire, Luz was at a party where she ran into Pedro’s cousin, whom she hadn’t seen in several years. The woman, Carolyn Correa, had with her a little girl named Aaliyah, whom she claimed was her daughter, though Luz didn’t remember her having children or being pregnant six years earlier. Even more suspicious was that six-year-old Aaliyah bore a striking resemblance to Luz herself and she couldn’t shake the feeling that Aaliyah was in fact her own supposedly dead daughter, Delimar. Had Luz Cuevas been right all along? Had Delimar somehow managed to survive the fire? And if so, why was she now in the custody of a strange woman she hadn’t seen in six years?Thank you to the incredible Dave White of Bring Me the Axe Podcast for research!ReferencesBenson, Clea, and Rusty Pray. 1997. "10-day-old baby dies in N. Phila. fire." Philadelphia Inquirer, December 16: 38.CBS News. 2004. New twist in baby ID case. March 9. Accessed June 28, 2024. https://www.cbsnews.com/news/new-twist-in-baby-id-case/.CNN. 2004. Mom finds kidnapped daughter six years later. March 2. Accessed June 28, 2024. https://www.cnn.com/2004/US/Northeast/03/01/girl.found.alive/.Cuevas v. City of Philadelphia. 2006. 05-3749 (United States District Court, E.D. Pennsylvania, August 11).Egan, Nicole Weisensee. 2005. "Her side of the story." Philadelphia Daily News, October 13: 3.Frisby, Mann. 1997. "Heater blamed in fire that clais infant." Philadelphia Daily News, December 16: 10.George, Jason. 2004. "Girl found and woman held after a ruse lasting years." New York Times, March 3: A13.Gregory, Sean. 2004. Back from the blaze. March 15. Accessed June 28, 2024. https://time.com/archive/6737931/back-from-the-blaze/.Pompilio, Natalie. 2004. "Kidnapped girl returned to birth mother." Philadelphia Inquirer, March 8.Pompilio, Natalie, and Joel Bewley. 2004. "Case of child once believed dead is far from over." Philadelphia Inquirer, March 6.Pompilio, Natalie, and Thomas Gibbons. 2004. "Woman suspected of kidnapping girl 6 years ago turns." Philadelphia Inquirer, March 2.Soteropoulos, Jacqueline. 2005. "Abductor of infant gets 9 to 30 years." Philadelphia Inquirer, September 24: 1.Tampa Bay Times. 2004. Daughter lost in fire returns, but questions swirl in family. March 7. Accessed June 27, 2024. https://www.tampabay.com/archive/2004/03/07/daughter-lost-in-fire-returns-but-questions-swirl-in-family/.The Record. 2004. DNA testing helps mom find only daughter. March 2. Accessed June 28, 2024. https://www.recordnet.com/story/news/2004/03/03/dna-testing-helps-mom-find/50702564007/.See Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.
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I'm Dan Tuberski. In 2011, something strange began to happen at a high school in upstate
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Hey, Weirdos, I'm Ash.
And I'm Alayna.
And this is Mor morbid.
This is morbid?
This is morbid.
Oh, it's morbid.
It's morbid.
And guess what?
We did another TikTok.
Hey, and it was really funny.
It was a fun one.
We used our girl, Kale Lowrys.
We did, and it was awesome.
Name and likeness or whatever it is.
Yeah, and you guys have been hilarious about it,
so thanks for supporting our TikTok journey with my book.
Shouldn't be outside enjoying the sunlight.
Should be in a cave.
Should be in a cave for the funniest audio.
What an unhinged thing to say to a human being.
Truly hilarious.
Hilarious.
I think even Kale would agree that that's fucking hilarious.
But like, whoa.
Yeah.
How does your brain just say to another person,
It's so calm.
She be in a cave.
She be in a cave.
Yeah.
I love it.
I think it's hilarious.
And I love her reaction.
Cause she's just like, what?
What the fuck are you talking about?
It's so good.
But that TikTok was really fun to film.
Yeah, you guys have been amazing about it.
So thanks for being so great.
What's your TikTok handle, you bitch?
What is it?
I think it's Elena to the max,
but everything is Elena to the max.
You gotta let the people know every time.
It's how we're gonna drive the people to your TikToks.
You know, I am the millennial.
We'll be doing more as September 17th approaches, which is the day that the book
comes out, the butcher game, thebutchergame.com.
If you need to order something, you could pre-order it.
It might come the day before.
Who knows?
That's always fun.
And like more signed copies might be happening.
Maybe.
Right?
Who knows?
You never know.
The world is an oyster and it's yours.
And it's my oyster.
Yeah.
No, theirs.
No, well, it's all of ours.
Yeah, everybody's oyster. We can all have a part of the oyster. Unless, no theirs. No, well, it's all of ours. Yeah, everybody's oyster.
We can all have a part of the oyster.
Unless you have a shellfish allergy.
I actually don't like shellfish.
So it's my like meatball sub, I would say.
I have to tell you something.
I told you I was never going to eat oysters again.
I ate them.
Vibrio.
I ate them, but I'm only eating them in places where, like,
I feel like the water is super fresh.
It's a vibe. Vibrio is also a vibe.
Vibrio is actually not a vibe.
It's a vibe. It's some kind of vibe.
Vibrio is a dank dark place.
I'm playing with fire, my friend.
I know. Well, YOLO.
You know, here we are, but YOLO.
YOLO, as the kids would say. I don't think they say that anymore.
I accidentally said YOLO. YOL anymore. I almost said, yo-lo. Yo-lo? I accidentally said, yo-lo.
Yo-lo.
Yo-lo-ly folks.
Here we are.
I don't know.
I have an interesting case today to tell you all about.
Do you?
I do.
It's kind of like not really like,
well, that's not true.
I was going to say it's not like anything.
It's not like anything we've ever done before.
It's totally different.
But it's not.
It's sort of.
It's like in a different wheelhouse, but it's still our wheelhouse, I feel. All right. But it's not. It's sort of, it's like in a different wheelhouse,
but it's still our wheelhouse. I feel. All right. It's a kidnapping. I'd like to warn
you at the top of the show. Okay. So it's a little bit intense. Okay. But I'm going
to also tell you it has a happy ending. Oh, good. Okay. And nobody dies. There's no murder.
Look at that. Yeah. So that's good. That is different. So here we are. Different wheelhouse.
All right. So should we dive in?
Let's dive in.
It's been a long time since I did that.
I know.
And it just came to me.
I did.
All right. So we're going to be talking about the disappearance of Delamar Vera. Delamar
Vera was born December 5th, 1997. So like we're about the same age.
Look at that.
To, I think it's pronounced loose. I looked it up, Cuevas and Pedro Vera, a young couple. They were living in
Feltonville, North Philadelphia. Loose was beyond excited.
Are you? Here we go.
Excited.
Excited.
Loose was beyond excited about the arrival of her baby daughter, but she always maintained her then
husband Pedro. Had hadn't been super stoked
about the prospect of having children. He was like, yeah, woohoo. According to her,
not super excited.
That's not great.
In fact, according to her, when the baby was born, Pedro actually refused to sign the birth
certificate, which she pointed to as evidence that he quote, did not want the child.
I think that's pretty glaring evidence, I would say.
Yeah, I'm like, I don't love that.
That's really sad.
I know. But a little more than a week later, on December 15th,
Luz was home with Pedro, their new baby, Delamar, which I think is such a pretty name,
and their two sons, who at that time were four and five.
And around 7 p.m., there was a knock on the door,
and Luz answered it to find a woman who she'd never met before standing on her doorstep. The woman, Carolyn Carrera,
was actually Pedro's cousin by marriage. She was from New Jersey. And she said she was
there hoping that Pedro might take a look at her car. She said her car was having brake
problems. Pedro was like good with car stuff. So she kind of just showed up from New Jersey
and said, Hey, take a look at my brakes. Okay. Random. Yeah. Unexpected. This is why I don't answer the door. Oh, I never
answered. No, I literally never answered the door. Even when it's people I'm expecting.
I said, Drew, he said, Nope, can you get the door? Oh, yeah, I don't even answer the door
then. Yeah, nope. Nope. But Pedro agreed to take a look at the car. But before he did,
he said he needed to run some errands and go grocery shopping.
So while he was out, the two women remained at the house,
just kind of making small talk,
because remember, they don't know each other.
So it's like a pretty awkward situation,
but she's kind of family, like she's family.
So she loses trying to like be a good entertainer.
I'd be like, sorry.
But she said later on, she would describe it
as an uncomfortable conversation.
Yeah, I can imagine.
And also, having just given birth a little over a week earlier, I don't think you'd
really want to be entertaining by yourself.
No, you don't.
But because she had just given birth only a week earlier, or like a little more than
a week earlier, the subject of a baby came up naturally.
And this woman, Carolyn, mentioned that she and her boyfriend, Andrea Moore, had also
just recently had a baby. She said, same sister. Wow. Now, as the women were chatting downstairs,
Lou suddenly heard a loud bang upstairs that sounded like an explosion and the baby sleeping
upstairs. What the fuck? So she is all obviously terrified and she runs upstairs and goes into
Delamar's room.
But by the time she reached the room,
a small fire had broken out,
and the room was beginning to fill with smoke.
Holy shit.
Now, despite the large amount of smoke now
and the fumes just rapidly filling the room,
Luz was able to get to the crib.
She was completely determined to get there.
And got there.
But Delamar was nowhere to be seen. What Soule-Nagant What the fuck?
Nicole Soule-Nagant She was gone.
Nicole Soule-Nagant In her own room?
Nicole Soule-Nagant Yep. She had just been sleeping in her room.
And then she heard a loud bang and the baby was gone by the time she got to the crib.
Nicole Soule-Nagant That's everyone's worst nightmare.
Nicole Soule-Nagant And it's also just like, how did this happen?
She was upstairs and I've been downstairs this whole time. Where's the baby? So a few
seconds later, the smoke had become unbearable and loose was forced to get out of the room.
After catching her breath, she tried again to go back in the room and get to the crib.
She actually suffered burns to her face and her arms. But when she reached the crib, her
first impression was confirmed. There was definitely no baby in that crib.
She also noticed that the window in the room was open and she knew that there was definitely no baby in that crib. What the fuck? No, she also noticed that the window in the room was open,
and she knew that there was no way she would have done that herself.
No.
Just one, having the baby in the room by herself,
she wasn't going to open the window, but also it was a cold night,
so it just wouldn't have been something that she'd do.
So this was shocking, but the fire had grown out of control at that point,
and she didn't have time to think,
because also she had other children that she had to get to.
Oh yeah, she has a four and five year old baby.
So they were forced outside.
And this is heartbreaking, neighbors just could hear her screaming, my baby, my baby.
Oh God.
Over and over again.
So hearing the noise and seeing the smoke and fire from the house, coming from the house,
a neighbor, 20 year old Jose Rosario, rushed over and tried
to get into the house to save the baby. Later, he told journalists that he heard crying.
So covering his face, he tried to climb the stairs to get to the baby, but the smoke was so thick,
he just couldn't get in there. He said, I tried the best I could, but the smoke was choking me.
Other neighbors also tried to help, like Chico Frazon,
who tried to douse the house with his garden hose, but it just, the fire was out of control.
Garden hose wasn't going to do anything. He told a reporter the flames were just too much.
So firefighters arrived at the scene quickly and they pushed back what was now a really
big crowd and they were all just, the crowd was shouting like, save the baby, save the
baby. Oh man. Frazon remembered the neighbors were shouting like, save the baby, save the baby. Oh, man.
Freizon remembered the neighbors were outside yelling, there's a baby in there. There's a baby.
And loose also reported to the firefighters that she had gone to her daughter's room when the when
the fire first broke out, but that she had found no baby in the crib where she had expected her baby
Delamar to be. That's horrifying. Now there's no documentation of how firefighters responded to the claims,
but it's pretty clear from their later statements that they didn't believe Luce at the time.
Why the fuck would she say that? I don't really know. Within about 10 minutes, firefighters
had things under control, luckily, and the fire was extinguished, but the small row house
had been completely gutted and there was no sign of little Delamar. Now just then,
Pedro returned to find the house destroyed, his wife being packed into an ambulance,
and he found out that his daughter was consumed by the fire. That's what firefighters told him.
Nicole Soule Holy shit.
Nicole Soule Yeah, Delamar ended up being declared dead at the scene and fire officials explained
to Pedro that they found no body because her remains were completely destroyed by the flames.
Now, just upfront, that is not what happened, so don't think for a second that that's
what happened.
But that's what this family was told.
But they never believed it.
Pedro didn't believe it, and neither did Luz.
So the next day, fire captain Henry Dulbury
told the press the fire was caused
by a home rigged extension cord connected to a space heater,
which must have thrown a spark at some point
and started the fire.
Oh man.
Neighbor Gloria Mohica said, it's a shame
because they were just trying to find a way
to keep themselves warm.
Yeah.
Luz was discharged from Temple University Hospital
just one day after the fire.
And she learned that not only were there no remains to bury,
but also that as a result of there not being a body,
the medical examiner actually couldn't issue
a death certificate or even legally declare Delamar dead.
Holy shit.
So like firefighters first responders said,
like declared her dead at the scene,
but they couldn't legally do that.
Like firefighters could, but they couldn't have it on record.
Like official record.
Exactly. And if the parents wanted or needed that formality,
they were going to have to go and petition a court.
To get their child declared legally dead.
Yeah.
When they don't know that for sure.
Exactly.
Wow.
So the family was understandably devastated. Yeah. But they didn't
really have a lot of choice but to move on and try to make things the best they could for their two
living children. So they moved to a new house and in 1999, Luz gave birth to a fourth child,
a boy that they named Samuel. They felt happy about adding to their family, obviously, but the loss of a child took a really heavy toll on them.
Of course.
And in December of 2022, excuse me, 2002,
Luz and Pager separated for good.
That's so common.
It is.
When you lose a child.
When you lose a child and just like grief in general,
that can tear people apart.
And by that time, they really just agreed on very little
and their communication was just, it had gotten really bad.
But they did agree on one thing.
They both believed that Delamar was still alive.
In 2004, Lou said, I always knew that my daughter did not die in that fire.
They were actually both very public about their beliefs.
Gloria Mojica recalled, every time I'd see Pedro, he'd say the same thing.
My baby's alive.
I know it. Wow.
They just like felt it in their hearts.
And it's like, you can see how like the whole thing
changed his perspective on being a father with this child.
You know what I mean?
Like you can tell he immediately was like,
that's my baby and my baby's alive.
It's like a very cliche thing to say,
but you don't know what you have till it's gone.
Yeah, it's like, obviously he was like, that's my child.
And they were correct, it sounds like.
So it's like they both have a parent connection.
That parent intuition.
Yeah.
Definitely.
Now, Pedro wasn't just convinced that his daughter was alive, but he was also determined
to find her wherever she had gone.
Hell yeah, Pedro.
I know.
Let's go.
Mojica said he would tell me he was pursuing it, though what exactly that meant, how he
was pursuing it, remains unclear.
But you know what?
He had intentions to, so.
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So on January 24th 2004, Luce went to a family party thrown by Pedro's sister Evelyn, where she
spotted a young girl who looked to be about six years old. According to Luz, the girl quote bore a striking resemblance
to herself and her other children. Luz, like we said, never believed Delamar died in the fire.
So when she saw the child, she instantly felt that it was Del shit. And she's just at a family party. And at a family party.
That feeling became even stronger when she realized that the girl's mother was Carolyn
Correa.
I think it's Correa.
I didn't trust this lady the second you said she showed up at the door.
She just showed up at the door from New Jersey randomly and was like, hey, I break surf.
I didn't want to say it for fear that like she was an innocent bystander here.
She's not.
So I was keeping it inside, but I was like, I don't know about this girl.
Imagine, like don't you imagine this.
No, listen, imagine your child goes missing from your home while a weird stranger is there.
And then you go to a family party and you see what you know is your child or like,
When you go to a family party and you see what you know is your child or like very, very strongly believe is your child and the lady who you had a weird feeling about already
is the mother to be the mother or is the lady that took this child to the party.
Like you dealt or loose must have felt like she was in an alternate fucking universe.
And the feeling of like helplessness at first must've been unreal because it's like, what
do I do?
When everyone's gonna think I sound cuckoo nuts bananas.
And it's like, if you know that's your child, you're like, well, I'm gonna burn the, I'm
gonna like scorch the earth to get this child back.
So like, I guess let's fucking go. Like that would be my, let's
go. Let's fucking go. Like I'm going to burn the whole place down. I would like I'm getting
that kid back. Well, don't you worry. Loose is the baddest bitch in the game. I knew it about loose.
So Carolyn introduced to this girl as a Leah was like, this is my daughter Aliyah.
But Luz just couldn't shake the feeling that,
not Aliyah, this was her daughter Delamar.
Oh my God.
And she was like, she started putting two and two together
and she's like, I don't know how, but somehow Carolyn kidnapped my baby
on the night of the fire. Like, I just know it in my heart.
She kept her distracted downstairs.
She later told a reporter, those dimples were all the DNA
I needed to be certain.
Because she had these cute little dimples. That is some mama shit. She had that child
for like a little over a week. Literally a little over a week. Like that's like, like
luckily, like luckily many of us do not have to worry about like what, how you would be
able to identify your child older when not seeing them for their entire life. But hearing this, you're just like, damn, like that parent, like love and knowledge
for your, like who your child is. That's unbelievable. It's a force. It's a little over a week. You
knew this infant newborn. And then you see them years later and you're like, that's my
kid. And like, let's be real, most newborns look alike.
Exactly.
Newborns all look pretty similar.
That's unbelievable.
Yeah.
That's really unbelievable.
This family is iconic.
Yeah, they're incredible.
So according to Pedro's cousin, Jose Vera, this was actually not the first time either
Pedro or Luz had seen Alia.
And while they weren't exactly close with Carolyn, they were still related and had some
contact with her over the years, but not much.
But Jose Vera said, they agreed the child looked like them and Pedro always thought
it was his daughter, but nothing ever happened till now.
Oh, damn.
So he claimed that although Pedro had seen the girl in person at family functions, Luz
had only ever seen her in photographs before this family function where she's like, that's
my daughter. That's my child.
And she really didn't have a lot of contact
with the family since ending her relationship
with Pedro in 2002.
But still they both together reported their suspicions
to the police and nothing ever came of the complaints
like from seeing the photographs and that kind of thing.
But now in 2004 with the girl just standing right in front of her,
Luce was like, without a doubt, 100% my daughter. Like I, I definitely thought so before, but now
I know. But now I'm in front of her. I'm in her presence. I know it. And she actually told the
host of the party that she believed Aliyah was Delamar. But given the unbelievable nature of
the claim, the host just kind of dismissed what she was saying. And was like, no, no, no, that's
Carolyn's daughter. Like you must be mistaken and probably
felt bad. Probably was like that. I have to tell you like, I'm sorry. No, like that's
somebody else's daughter. Right. But Luz's own brother even doubted what she was saying
and said, we thought she was just traumatized by the fire, which like you can understand
that. Yeah. Cause it's like that would be traumatizing. I can't even fathom the amount of trauma she would have. Absolutely. I'm sure. Yeah. Like
so you and trauma makes you do some things that you know, you wouldn't normally do or like makes
you think things. Yeah, she's desperate to find her child again. So maybe this is one of those
instances where it's like she's just desperate. Or maybe not. Or maybe not. So later that afternoon,
Luz was like, okay, you guys can
all think I'm Cucunuts Bananas, but I'm not. And I'm going to prove it to all of you. So she
approached the girl, the little girl, and just made small talk with her. And then right before
Aliyah was about to run off, Luz told her, oh, you have some gum in your hair. Like, let me help you
with that. And while she removed the gum, or up, like while she pretended to, to remove the gun, she used it as an opportunity
to get a hair sample that she could take to the police for DNA
testing. When I said is a fucking icon, when I said baddest
bitch in the game, I meant it.
Loose. I want to like shake loose his hand. I want to high
five her. Holy shit loose.
And she's genius level.
She's so nonchalant about it too.
She told reporters later because of TV, I knew they needed hair for the DNA.
Oh bitch.
Like loose is top notch.
She's like, I just watched TV.
I learned some shit.
That's elite.
That's elite behavior loose.
And also that's elite behavior because you did nothing to scare this girl.
And that's a mama.
And nothing to inform her that her, you know, her anything was being called into question.
Like that's unbelievable.
Unbelievable.
Truly unbelievable because your first instinct might be to just like, you know, you're like,
again, you're traumatized.
You're desperate to find your child. Yeah. You would want to run up to her and, you know, you're like again, you're traumatized. You're desperate to find your child. Yeah
You would want to run up to her and just be like you're my baby
This child clearly was gone
Barely a week after her birth. Mm-hmm. Whoever should mother quote-unquote. She thinks is her mother
That's the only mother she's known. That's the thing. She's six years old.
She's been raised for six years by Carolyn.
You can't scare her.
You can't make her question her whole upbringing.
You can't, you don't know what kind of life she's had.
You don't know anything about that.
So it's like, you can't just run up to her and be like,
I think you're my kid.
Like she's six.
Like she's going to be like, what?
So doing that in such a way that is one brilliant
and two totally nonchalant and
not upsetting to that girl at all is like mama.
Well done, Luce.
So a few days after the party, Luce brought the hairs to her local Philadelphia police
precinct to ask for help.
And they redirected her to a lab where she could actually get the DNA testing done.
Hell yeah.
According to the official story, remember, Delamar Vera had died in a tragic fire,
and police never believed she was kidnapped.
So there was actually little they could
have done to help her at the time.
According to Representative Angel Cruz, who would eventually
prove instrumental in solving this case,
the language barrier between Luce,
who spoke very little English, and law enforcement
might have caused additional confusion
and prevented faster action.
I'm sure.
So Luce had hoped to get the DNA test done
to prove that Aliyah was her daughter,
but with limited English language skills,
no information about how to access laboratory testing,
and of course, little financial resources.
That kind of thing is so expensive.
Yeah.
The chances that she would get answers were pretty slim.
But after hearing her story,
though, a neighbor suggested that Luz seek help from Representative Angel Cruz, who represented
the largely Latino Philadelphia neighborhood that Luz was living in at the time. Cruz said,
I must admit, when Luz first came to me with this story, I had trouble believing her.
Nicole Soule I mean, it's, it's, it's an incredible story.
Bekkah L. It is.
Yeah.
But something in the story struck him as being true, so he agreed to speak with law enforcement
on her behalf and explain what she had told him.
He was like, I don't know, but I'll try.
Hell yeah, Cruz.
Now, when the fire first broke out in Pedro and Lucy's home in 1997, her instinct was
to run to the daughter's room and save her. It's worth noting
she had been alerted to the danger because of the loud bang, not the fire itself, which
hadn't broken out yet by the time she reached the room. And when she reached the crib, Delamar
had already vanished and then the fire began. That's the thing. When I was first telling
that story, you heard loud bang, runs upstairs, sees that
the crib is empty and then the room starts filling with smoke and the fire breaks out.
I was wondering, like, because I'm like, what is this loud bang?
Like what happened here?
Exactly.
And you could assume like, oh, that was the space heater exploding.
When you said that, I was like, oh, that must have been it.
But who knows?
Maybe it was somebody opening the window.
Maybe it was a ladder being thrown on the side of the house.
I don't know.
Yeah. So all that to say though, when Luce reported to fire officials that her daughter was missing,
she meant that the girl hadn't been in the house when the fire began. But as Angel Cruz pointed out, it's entirely possible that because of that language barrier, investigators just thought
that she meant her daughter was trapped in the house during the fire. Absolutely, I can see that.
Which you understand that, of course.
Any claims Luce and Pedro made after the fire were just dismissed as those of grieving parents struggling to accept what had happened.
Yeah, just not being willing to.
And also, when Luce initially took the lock of hair to the police, she brought it to the front desk of the precinct,
because how would she know to bring it in? I wouldn't know what to do with it.
But the receiving officer had no prior knowledge of
the case and there wasn't any kind of translator there to help with the barrier, the language
barrier. So she wasn't able to really convey like how important this was, what the background
here was.
Yeah. So it's so frustrating.
Yeah, it is. So to Angel Cruz, who spoke fluent Spanish, the
story, like we said, was equally unbelievable. And his instinct, though, was to respond exactly
how law enforcement agents had over the years. But the fact that loose had never wavered
in her belief, and she was so thoroughly convinced that the girl was her daughter seemed good
enough a reason to him to at least follow up. Yeah. So he contacted the police on her behalf and he was successfully able to convince them
to follow up on this claim.
Another goodie.
I know.
This is full.
That's what I told you.
It started off and you're like,
what the fuck are you about to tell me?
What is going on?
But I'm like, no, it's a good story.
Yeah, you're like, I promise you.
I promise you guys.
This just keeps going up and up and up.
It does and it will.
So given the details of the crime
and the age of the alleged victim,
the case was handed over to Lieutenant Michael Boyle
of Philadelphia Special Victims Unit, an episode of SVU,
if you will.
In late February, detectives and agents
from Child Protective Services went to Carolyn's home
in New Jersey and explained the situation.
Now, given that so much depended on the outcome of the DNA tests, Alia was actually removed
from the home and temporarily placed in a foster care while investigators tried to untangle
the details of the case.
It's like, that's so sad.
And she's probably remember, like we said, this is the only mom she's ever known.
She has no idea what's going on.
And she's little girl.
She's probably like, what the, like what is going on?
Yeah. And it's like, and again, like this is,
this is all because somebody stole her.
And it's like, Luce is just trying to get her back.
And obviously they have to go through the steps,
the proper steps to do.
They can't just rip her out of a home and be like,
well, she's yours now.
Like, you know what I mean?
Like, I understand that.
They could get in trouble for that.
Like that's necessary.
But like, man, this kid didn't ask for any of this. No, and she's yours now. Like, you know what I mean? Like, I understand that. Like that's necessary. But like, man, this kid didn't ask for any of this.
No, and she's-
And poor Lou St. Pedro didn't ask for any of this.
Carolyn, like just victimized everybody in this family.
She did.
She victimized that child.
Yeah, exactly.
And it's like, that's fucked up.
Just to get something she wanted.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah.
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So according to Carolyn, she had given birth to her daughter, Leah, in December of 1997.
No, you didn't.
Right around the same time that Luce had her baby.
Oh, wow.
In fact, other family members and her own boyfriend at the time remembered her being
pregnant and coming home with a baby at the end of December.
Despite the number of times that Pager had voiced his suspicions,
nobody ever thought to question Carolyn and her boyfriend's claims because why would you ever be
like... What would make you do it? That's the thing. That's the thing. Now, after all, while
newborn babies do get kidnapped, it's kind of a rare occurrence. Yeah. I mean, that's not the
first thing you're thinking that these people staged a wild coup to steal your newborn.
And not only that, like I'm talking about like their own family. Few people would want
to believe their own relatives capable of this.
No, can you imagine thinking of that?
No.
Like in your own family?
No.
That somebody in your own family stole another person's baby in your own family?
Absolutely not.
Out of their crib? After starting a fire in their house?
It's so beyond.
But this time through Luce's insistence
and the new hair evidence and pending DNA results,
it was compelling enough that at least a few members
of law enforcement were starting
to really take this seriously.
Hell yeah, let's go everybody.
At first everybody's like, yeah, we'll follow up,
but like, I don't know.
It was a case of let's fucking go. And now it's like, yeah, we'll follow up. But like, I don't know. It was a case of let's fucking go.
And now it's like, let's fucking go.
Exactly.
So in late February, the results of the DNA tests
conducted on Aliyah's hair came back
and provided vital answers.
The girl that Carolyn had been passing off
as her daughter Aliyah for the past six years, nope.
That was Delamar Vera.
Fuck Carolyn. Yeah. Fuck Carolyn. Well. What the
fuck? With the results in hand, Lieutenant Boyle and his partner returned to Carolyn's
home in New Jersey to confront her. But by the time they got there, she had already fled,
leaving her three other young children behind. Oh, it's on site with Carolyn.
On site.
Like, fuck you, Carolyn.
What an asshole.
And that's the thing.
It's like, she's just out for her and hers.
You're evil.
Not even hers.
You stole someone's newborn, you fucking asshole.
And then you abandoned your three other children to flee law enforcement after you got caught.
It's fucked to steal any newborn.
Like, don't keep it that weird.
To steal a newborn child from your family?
It's-
What?
I know you married into this family,
but that's your family.
Who the fuck are you, Carolyn?
I hope we see something for Carolyn at the end of this.
Well, investigators, now that she was on the run,
theorized that certain she'd been found out
and would be arrested, she chose to become a fugitive
rather than face the consequences.
Oh, you mean coward.
Yes, exactly.
Because, I mean, everything more or less confirmed her guilt
in the eyes of detectives.
DNA just proved it.
You stole a baby.
So in a statement to the press, a law enforcement official
stated their belief that on the night of December 15, 1997, Caroline started the fire and kidnapped Elimar whom she passed off as her
own daughter. Wow. And when they realized that she had fled, multiple arrest warrants were issued
for charges including arson, kidnapping, and concealing the whereabouts of a child. So she
was facing like serious, serious charges here. Yeah. Not just kidnapping, like that's a serious
charge in and of itself.
But arson.
Arson and concealing the whereabouts of a child. Like, did you not think about this?
Yeah, she did.
I don't know.
Yeah, she didn't care.
Despite the circumstances though, Luz couldn't help but feel joy that her daughter wasn't
only alive, but would also be reunited with her in the days to come.
Yeah. Boyle told reporters she sat there and shook and cried and kept saying, thank you, thank
you, thank you.
But this is going to be tough.
Absolutely.
This is not good.
This kid is six years old.
That's the thing.
On the other not so bright side of things, this was just the beginning of a slow and
like you said, very difficult process facing everybody involved.
Most importantly, Aliyah, or really Delamar,
had only ever known Carolyn to be her mother, like we've said. And she was now being told
that not only was Carolyn not her mother, but Carolyn was her kidnapper who had stolen
her from her actual mother just days after her birth. A concept that no fucking six-year-old
would ever be able to wrap their head around. You can't even imagine a grown adult finding that out.
No.
A teenager finding that out.
How do you explain that to a six-year-old?
Without creating, like, first of all, creating so many new fears.
Yeah, that they were kidnapped out of their crib.
Disillusioning their entire world.
Like, that's just, that's a glass shatter on your entire world.
And now you have to reform that bond with that child.
Like you're gonna have a natural, something's there,
because obviously you knew that was your child.
Like your bond is strong, it's in there.
But she's probably gonna miss Carolyn
and like feel kind of weird about it.
But there's so many layers that you could point out here.
I just feel so bad for, I feel so bad for,
because she goes by Aliyah.
She ends up going by Aliyah.
Because that's what she's been known as.
That makes sense.
And also like how, like that's a pretty big thing
of loose and Pedro to do, to be like, you know what?
We'll keep your name Aliyah, like your kidnapper named you
that, but that's all you know.
And we're not going to change your name.
Like, you know, I mean, like I wouldn't even change like a puppy's name.
And you know what I mean?
Like, and it's like that, that's the, and also like you said, your kidnapper named you
that.
Right.
And also it's like, I named you something.
Yeah.
You were, you know what I mean?
Like I named you Delamar. Like that was the, I named you something. Yeah. Like you were, you know what I mean? Like I named you Delamar.
Like that was the name I chose for you.
It's almost like a-
Now I can't call you that.
It's like a different thing to grief.
Yeah.
Like luckily your child is still alive and healthy and you get to have her back.
But you're grieving that identity that you created for them when they were born.
Exactly.
So that's a lot on everybody.
Yeah. And the other thing was further complicating matters, which were already insanely complicated,
like we're pointing out now.
Lou spoke very little English and Alia spoke no Spanish.
So their ability to communicate with each other, at least initially, required a translator
and the services of a professional social worker.
So it's all very like, I'm sure they
did their best to make it like not as clinical as it had to be. But still that's like not
a setting any six year old is going to be super open in.
So Carolyn did all this and also took her out of her culture and didn't teach her the
language that she would have been taught. Yep. Wow.
Yep.
Wow, Carolyn.
Wow.
Unreal.
Now, shortly after the discovery of all this, Carolyn, accompanied by her attorney, turned
herself in to the authorities in Philadelphia.
Good, as you should.
The arrest was a welcome noose to lucid her family in Pedro.
She told a reporter if she was so evil then and started a fire, she could do
that now with the kids inside. Yes, absolutely. That's the other thing. She could have killed her
other two children with that fire. Absolutely. And she had no fucking... That's exactly what I was
just gonna say. She didn't give a shit. And also she abandoned her other kids to run away from this.
Yeah, exactly. Fuck her. Now, detectives in Philadelphia were equally pleased with Carolyn's
surrender, with Captain John Darby saying,
we are pleased that this phase of a complex, protracted, and emotionally charged investigation
has been completed with the subject's arrest in this short time.
SONIA DARAEUX Me too.
SONIA DARAEUX Same.
Now, while the arrest appeared to be the beginning of the end of the police involvement in the case,
it also raised just as many questions as it answered.
Because to those who knew her, the arrest and allegations
of a kidnapping seemed 100% impossible.
Evelyn Vera, Pedro's sister, said the rest of the family
wasn't surprised when Carolyn showed up
with a baby in December because they at all believed
that she had been pregnant.
In fact, in early January, 1998,
a few weeks after the fire,
she went to the police station in New Jersey,
in Willingborough,
and reported that she had given birth at home.
A bizarre incident they now believe
was intended to cover her tracks,
should there be any suspicion.
Holy shit.
Because obviously she hadn't given birth anywhere.
Like she's not, there's no records of her having given birth in a hospital.
So she was like, oh, I have to do, like she researched this somehow.
Or like she figured out that she had to go report this, that she quote unquote gave birth at home
so that there would be record of it.
And also...
Damn, that's cunning as fuck.
That's the thing.
It's...
That's really fucked up.
And the fact that everybody believed she was pregnant, like she had to have been showing.
Yeah.
It's like, what?
Hello?
What's going on here?
Now, when it came to Aliyah, there was some tension between the two of them.
But for the most part, everybody remembered that Carolyn doted on the girl.
Evelyn Vera said she treated that little girl better than her three other kids.
That's fucked up.
That's also fucked up.
I'm glad she treated her well, but I'm sorry for those other three children.
Aliyah was enrolled in private school and although she was just six years old, she had
already begun a modeling career appearing in television and print ads, which also you're
just flaunting her.
You know what it like?
There's so many layers there that I'm like this sec. psychologist but in this I'm not saying anything about like kids modeling.
I'm saying in this specific case you kidnapped this child and now she's appearing in television ads and you're like, oh, like that's my baby.
Yeah, the fucking pathology and the psychology behind that you could spend years studying.
Yep.
What?
And it's like, that's definitely you just living through this child and wanting to get
the like, pats on the back for like, look at my pretty little girl and modeling ad.
Just like dangling her in front of the people who are like, I'm pretty sure that's my kid.
Like that's the that's the aspect that I'm looking at.
Like what the fuck?
When they said she's evil, they are 100% correct. This woman is evil. Like that's the aspect that I'm looking at. Like what the fuck? When they said she's evil, they are 100% correct.
This woman is evil.
Like that's diabolical.
Now what made the story even stranger
was that there were many members of the Vera family
who not only knew of Pedro and Luce's belief
that their daughter was still alive,
but several of them,
like a lot of people didn't believe it,
but several family members did believe
that Carolyn's daughter was actually Delamar.
Wow. Jose Vera said, "'We told my Pager about it, but nothing ever happened. Nothing
was done. I don't know why. Because what do you do? Because they did report certain things
to the police, but the police were like, we don't have any fucking evidence. Yeah. They
were like, that's crazy. And there was language barriers. There was so many things. Doesn't
seem like it was like top of the to do list list for the police at the time. No, it didn't seem that way.
Until Luce came in there with the hair.
Yeah.
My girl Luce.
And then Cruz was like, I'll take care of this.
Exactly.
Now even Carolyn's boyfriend at the time was actually suspicious of her story.
In 1999, he confronted Carolyn about his suspicions and demanded to take a paternity test to prove
whether the child was his or not.
And at that point, she broke up with him
and never had any contact with him after that.
You wish that, and I understand,
like this is a position none of us can imagine being in,
but I wish that he, once she had broken up with him,
he had gone to police and been like,
I think this kid was stolen. I think this kid was stolen.
I think this kid was kidnapped.
I don't think this kid is hers.
But again, I can't imagine being in his position
thinking that of your significant other.
And honestly, he might've, I didn't come across that,
but like Pedro and Luce had gone to the police
with suspicions. And honestly, if that guy did too,
then like kudos to him.
And I'm sorry, it didn't work out, but like,
but even if he didn't, I'm like,
I can't imagine that position.
So, but you just wish like thinking back.
Cause also you probably, like if you're having
those suspicions and then she breaks up with you
all of a sudden, that pretty much confirms it.
But then you must sit there with your own thoughts
and say, no, I'm insane.
Like there's no way.
And I'm claiming this kid is not mine.
Like that's why am I thinking that?
You know, like. Yeah, there's a lot of layers to that. A lot of guilt. Right. And I'm claiming this kid is not mine. Like that's why am I thinking that? You know, like.
Yeah, there's a lot of layers to that.
A lot of guilt.
Right.
And having truly believed Carolyn to have been pregnant at the time, the breakup also
left him with troubling unanswered questions.
He said, my question is, where's the child she and I had together?
It's a traumatic experience.
Oh, I can't imagine.
Because he thought she had been pregnant with his baby.
And then she's got this child and he's like, I don't think this is our child.
And she's like, well, fuck you.
And just breaks up with him and cuts off contact.
Because now he's probably thinking like, is that my child?
And I can't see them now?
Like, what the fuck?
And now I'm feeling some layer of guilt
because I questioned.
I still don't believe that's my kid.
Like, what happened to my child that I thought you were pregnant with?
It's wild.
This woman fucked so many people up. She did. And it's a whole family. Ooh. my kid, like what happened to my child that I thought you were pregnant with. It's wild.
This woman fucked so many people up.
She did.
And it's a whole family.
Ooh.
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If some members of the family were stunned by the revelation that Aliyah was Delamar,
there were others who were less surprised by the news. After all, this actually wasn't
the first time Carolyn had been in trouble with the law.
I'm shocked.
Or the first time she'd made up a wild story to explain away someone's suspicions. In
1996, she had actually been arrested and charged with starting a fire at a New Jersey
medical office where she'd been working as a billing clerk. According to police,
Carolyn had been stealing business checks and cashing them. But when she believed her boss had
caught on to what she was doing, she quote, tried to destroy evidence by setting fire to the office.
SONIA DARA Wow, Carolyn.
CARRIE Wow.
SONIA DARA Once a arsonist, always an arsonist.
SONIA DARA Wow. Yeah.
CARRIE Also, there were people still inside the building at the time she set the fire.
She doesn't care about killing people.
She doesn't care.
As long as she's getting what she wants out of it.
It's pure luck that she hasn't.
That I've heard from you yet.
Carolyn's out for Carolyn and Carolyn only.
She doesn't give a shit.
But because there was people in the
building at the time she set the fire, she was charged with aggravated arson. As she should be.
In addition to the fraud and theft charges, but she agreed to plead guilty to a third degree
charge in exchange for probation and community service. I'm sorry, if someone tries to burn down
a building with people inside of it, that's attempted murder. Also, let me tell you, if I was in that motherfucking office at the time that she had set it ablaze
and I found out that she got probation.
In community service.
I would be through the fucking roof.
I'd be calling everybody.
That seems really wild to me. Like that's not enough.
And also, but wait, there's more. That's what this story should be titled.
But wait, there's more. It was also not story should be titled. But wait, there's more.
It was also not the only time Carolyn had claimed to be pregnant when she wasn't.
Oh, you don't say.
In 2000, while working at a drug store, she told multiple coworkers that she was pregnant,
even though she never showed any physical signs of being pregnant.
That fall, she took maternity leave.
And when she returned to work and trigger warning, she says something terrible. She claimed that the baby was stillborn and even went so far as to show several of
her coworkers a photograph of a dead newborn.
I don't even know how to respond to that. Her boss said, it was kind of gruesome. I
really didn't know what to say to her. She didn't have a stillborn.
Carolyn is one of the grossest people I've heard of. Like that's, she's gross.
That's unbelievable.
This case, obviously whenever a child that is presumed to have been missing for many,
many years is recovered, it's remarkable. But in this case, the most unbelievable part
of it probably was Carolyn's version of events that led to her taking on the role of Alia's mother. According to her, she did go to Pedro and
Lucy's home on December 15, 1997, but she didn't kidnap Delamar. She said Pedro handed
the girl over for a few inexplicable reasons, and she never had any idea why he did that.
In a 2005 interview, she said, I've thought about it. Why didn't I question it?
Yeah.
But it made my emptiness go away.
So she just never questioned his actions.
And you know that baby had a mother
that you were sitting talking to downstairs?
It filled your emptiness though, to steal her newborn.
Yeah, totally.
Yeah.
Definitely.
Okay, that makes sense. That makes it fine.
Also, that just doesn't make any sense whatsoever.
It's fine.
It's fine.
If her story seemed entirely implausible,
it only got stranger from there.
She also claimed that Luce had not only known the truth
about her daughter all along, but actually she
had been there when Pedro handed the baby over
after the fire broke out.
Nope.
And as evidence that she was telling the truth, she pointed to the number of times that Pedro
had visited her and her family at their home in New Jersey, including one occasion when
he, she said he was accompanied by Luce.
She said, why is it that Pedro is not arrested?
I didn't do this by myself and he gave me the child.
Why didn't he get the kid before?
If he would have come to me and got her?
It wouldn't hurt me as bad as it's hurting me now
Here's the thing too the statement that she just made that says why didn't he get the kid before?
Yeah, you don't love that kid. No the kid you don't refer to your kid as the kid
Why didn't he get the kid? I've never referred to my chair. Like what?
Why didn't you go get that the kid over there? It's like, what? Like, no, I don't believe shit
all that you're saying. Like we said, Carolyn's out for Carolyn. Yeah. While authorities never
believed that Pedro Vera was involved in his daughter's kidnapping, the charges against
Carolyn did allege that she had not acted alone. Yeah. But the documents only named
an unnamed conspirator and no additional arrests were ever made.
That's horrifying.
That's what I'm wondering.
She was downstairs distracting Luce.
Exactly.
Somebody came in that room and stole that child for her.
Like she was involved obviously,
but like she didn't do the act herself.
Right.
I'm sure she came up with a plan and that kind of thing.
What the fuck was that?
Isn't that interesting that it's the person is only named,
is only like referred to as an unnamed conspirator.
Because it's like, who is this person that would go into a nursery
and steal a newborn out of a window?
Also, they had to have a really compelling story to, to be in all of this.
No, that's wild.
Yeah, it's weird.
But in 2005, Pedro's lawyer, Mike Luber,
told reporters this woman who is obviously a pathological, this is a woman who was obviously
a pathological liar. She has significant mental problems. Two of the psychiatrists have said she
is mentally imbalanced and she obviously will say anything to do anything to avoid the music,
so to speak. She abandoned her children to he said the one thing she hasn't said is the truth,
who the real conspirator is.
That's so weird.
Isn't that weird?
That's so weird.
And I just, there's not enough information
about the case to point fingers.
Obviously I'm not gonna point fingers.
Yeah, you're not gonna speculate.
But like I wish I could speculate on my own.
Yeah.
But there's not enough.
There's just not enough.
For her part, Carolyn has always stuck
to her story and maintained her innocent. She said, I feel it's unfair. I raised her for six
years and instead of saying, I want my child back saying this woman kidnapped my kid. Well, I didn't.
That's Carolyn who's saying it's unfair. I raised her instead of saying, I want my child back saying
this woman kidnapped my kid because she's saying they should have of saying, I want my child back saying this woman kidnapped my kid.
Because she's saying they should have said like,
I want my kid back because I gave my kid to you voluntarily
and now I want it back.
Wow.
And she's like, instead they're saying I kidnapped this child
or this kid.
This kid, yeah.
Instead, she believes once Pedro learned that she had lost her baby
in December of 1997,
he decided to hand his own child over to her.
I don't know about that.
According to the Philadelphia Daily News, her medical records actually show no sign
of her having been pregnant at the time or giving birth to a stillborn baby, as she claims.
But she has stuck to that story.
When in all reality, records indicate that she actually had a tubal ligation in 1990.
Wow.
So like, I don't know a lot about that surgery. I don't know if it's reversible.
But I know even when people do try to get like their tubes untied, it depletes your chances of getting pregnant.
It can be reversed by another operation.
Only about 50 to 80% of women are able to become pregnant
after having their fallopian tubes reattached.
That's what I figured.
Like I know some surgeries like that claim to be reversible,
but a lot of them, it's a much lower chance.
So who's to say?
Yeah.
But in her version of events,
Carolyn went to the house that day to give Pedro a ride to a friend's house to buy drugs
She said
Meanwhile like they were like no she showed up asking to
Her breaks to be fixed, but she said after she dropped him off
She returned to loose at the house just before the fire started once the fire started
She helped loose get all the three other get all the other children out of the house
Before returning to the friend's house to pick up Pedro and tell him what happened. But that couldn't have been true because first
responders at the scene told Pedro what happened when he got back. Yeah. She alleged all the
way back to the house. He said, it's my fault. I cut the wires in the heater and did something.
And when they got near the house, she claims he asked her to drop him about a block away
from the house. And a few minutes later, he returned to the car and handed her the baby.
What?
So he got the baby out of the fire?
That I'm like, what?
Like that doesn't make any sense whatsoever.
The fire started.
So you drove him to his friend's house to quote unquote, buy drugs.
Then you went back to Lucy's house and then the fire happened and nobody knew
where the baby was and the baby was already missing from her crib.
And then you left to go get Pedro.
And then Pedro said, Oh no, that's my fault.
Thank you for helping my family out of the fire.
Here's my baby who I found after the fire.
Even though no firefighters could find this baby.
What?
Anyway, she continued,
I took her home, laid down next to her and played with her.
From then on, she was mine and no one questioned it.
Except multiple people for six entire years.
What the fuck?
No one questioned it, baby.
What the fuck are you talking about?
It's documented that people have questioned it, baby. What the fuck are you talking about? It's documented that
people have questioned it. Yeah, literally documented. As the trial neared, Carolyn agreed to plead no
contest to the charges. And in late September, 2005, she was sentenced to nine to 30 years in
prison for the abduction. After the sentence was passed, she addressed the court saying,
I truly believe I need counseling, Your Honor. I want to apologize to the family and the court for all of this confusion."
All of this confusion.
Hey, I'm glad you're saying you need counseling
because like 10 out of 10 agree.
Because absolutely.
Check out BetterHelp.
Yeah.
Confusion?
You talk to a therapist about calling that confusion
because I don't know about that.
Yeah.
But in response, Judge Pamela Dembe called Carolyn's remarks breathtakingly short of
the mark and said, and what I'm hearing in your voice still is an angry desire to put
a lot of the responsibility on someone else.
I can't imagine letting another parent believe that their child had been burned to death.
That's the other thing.
It's like you didn't just kidnap this child and this child was like missing.
Like they were just like, which it would be devastating enough to think that somebody
just kidnapped your child.
They were led to believe that she burned to death in her crib.
To the point where there was literally nothing left.
Nothing for them to do a memorial.
Nothing.
Nothing.
And they also remember couldn't even have her legally declared dead.
So there was no headstone to visit. Nothing. Nothing. Wow. Nothing. In addition to the prison sentence,
the judge ordered Carolyn to serve a five-year probation sentence and to never have contact
with any of the victims ever again. Now the process of restoring custody of the child
to her parents, like we were saying earlier, was a very slow
and very difficult one. A court awarded shared custody to both Luce and Pedro, but it was
agreed that her primary residence would be with Luce. And for the sake of their daughter,
Pedro and Luce maintain a cordial relationship.
Good.
Pedro's lawyer said, this child already has a fragile psyche. If we get into custody and
visitation battles, it's going to get messy. That was really good of them though, to like put their own shit aside, which like I imagine
it's hard to do anyways in that scenario. Yeah, absolutely. And it's like to make sure
you're putting her and her well-being first. Yeah, absolutely. Finally, while they always
referred to their daughter as Delamar, like I was saying earlier, both Luz and Pedro agreed
to continue calling the girl Alia so as not to disrupt or
confuse her any further. Because remember, she was six years old when she was
reunited with them.
Like six years she's been Alia.
In late March of 2004, less than a month after Alia was returned to them, Luz and
Pedro sold the rights to their story for a movie and a book to the Larry A.
Thompson Organization, a company known for producing made for TV movies. And in 2008,
if this entire thing has been sounding like a Lifetime movie to you, it became one. It
became one. The Lifetime Network premiered Little Girl Lost, the Delamar Vera story,
and the family and Angel Cruz agreed it was an accurate and respectful depiction of their
story. So that's great.
Yeah.
In August 2006, both parents, Pager and Luce, filed a civil suit against the city of Philadelphia,
including the Philadelphia Fire Department, alleging that several city and law enforcement
officials had violated their quote, federal statutory right under the National Child Search
Assistance Act of 1990 and their 14th Amendment right by failing to conduct a proper search
for Delamar. I understand that. During and after the fire. Act of 1990 and their 14th Amendment right by failing to conduct a proper search for
Delamar during and after the fire. The court was sympathetic to the complaints lodged by
Luce and Pedro, but ultimately it dismissed the complaint, writing, after much analysis
and with considerable appreciation for the professional skills of several of the counsel
involved in this wrenching case that has no doubt caused many heads to shake and wonder at its occurrence
and many sympathetic helping hands
to be extended to the people involved
for the reasons discussed below.
The motions to dismiss the complaint will be granted."
So they did so with sympathy, which was nice.
Yeah, like they didn't just say like, fuck that.
And I think it would have been like
difficult to go through more court proceedings.
It must be hard to prove all of that. So it's probably a good thing.
Exactly. So you hope that now they're all just living peacefully and that everything
is going well for all of them and that they wake up on the right side of the bed every
day. I want all good things for this family.
Honestly, because it's like you've been through enough.
That's the thing. Like, damn, absolutely bonkers story. And I mean, there's pictures of them
now together and everything and they look so happy and adorable. And that makes you
so happy. That's awesome. What a wild story though. I was just looking for true crime
stories that weren't like, you know, like the typical
kind of thing.
Yeah.
And this one had a happy ending and that made me happy.
Wow.
That's wow.
That was a wild story that I've not heard of.
The cray cray one.
I never heard it before I started looking up.
I think I literally wrote true crime stories with a happy ending.
Yeah, I love that because you're just like, I just want one.
I just needed one. I just needed one.
I would like one now.
So yeah.
That is one of the craziest cases
I think we've ever covered.
Truly, and I'm happy that I had a happy ending
for that family. Same.
I hope you guys enjoyed it.
I hope they're thriving.
I hope they're thriving.
They look like they are.
Yeah.
They look so happy.
Yeah.
And we hope you keep listening.
And we hope you keep it weird.
But not so weird that you ever kidnap a baby
out of their crib and lie about it
because don't listen to the show if you do that.
Don't.
And just don't do that.
Don't do that.
Bye. So I'm sorry. If you like Morbid, you can listen early and ad-free right now by joining Wondery Plus
in the Wondery app or on Apple podcasts. Prime members can listen ad-free on Amazon Music.
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