By SHAUNA ANDERSON
“My baby’s gone. I can’t find her. I put her down for a sleep in her cot and she’s not there. Somebody’s taken her.”
These were the words Jayde Pool screamed down the phone to her sister on the night of December 11 2012.
A panicked phone call from the mother of a five-month old baby.
Imagine the terror. The gut churning horror that would seize your body.
She had been on the phone to a friend. She had settled herself outside with a cup of tea and a cigarette. Her two older kids had been fed and bathed.
It was a warm evening. The lead up to Christmas well underway.
She went to check on her baby, five-month old Bella.
Her cot was empty.
Her bottle was on the cupboard.
She wonders how did it get there. She runs to the phone and calls her sister. “Where’s Bella? Where’s Bella?”
“I put her down for a sleep and she’s not there,”
“Someone’s taken her.”
She called police. Minutes later they arrived and together the frantic search continued.
Tragically they then found baby Bella. She had been left in the car. Strapped to her car seat. She was now dead.
Jayde Poole from Bendigo is a single mother of three children. Baby Bella was five moths old when she died in her car seat. Another victim of “forgotten baby syndrome.”
Yesterday a Supreme Court jury found Jayde Poole aged 29 not guilty of manslaughter.