The New South Wales Coroner has recommended “safe haven” laws to allow desperate parents to hand over their babies without fear of “humiliation or prosecution”.
The recommendations came at the inquest into the death of baby Lily Grace, who was found buried in a shallow grave in sand dunes at South Maroubra beach in November 2014.
Two young boys who were playing in the dunes made the gruesome discovery.
In handing down his findings into the little girl’s death, Coroner Hugh Dillon said the case was “mysterious, distressing and, indeed, confronting”.
“The purpose of this inquest is not to attempt to shame anyone, especially the mother of Lily Grace,” he said.
“Although we do not know who she is, it takes little imagination to understand that to lose a baby and to seek to hide that baby’s death in this way suggests that the mother was desperate.
“The fact that she has not come forward suggests that she is ashamed, vulnerable and scared.
“Any decent person would immediately understand that she needs help and understanding rather than cheap and shallow criticism.”
Mr Dillon said there was no evidence that baby Lily Grace was stillborn and that it was likely she had not been born in a hospital because her umbilical cord was severed, rather than clamped as it would have been in a hospital.
But he was unable to determine how the infant died, her identity or the identity of the mother who abandoned her.