
Little boy found abandoned at courthouse after desperate parents pleaded with cops to 'take him away'
Jeremy Lamp, 36, and Jessica Lamp, 31, are accused of leaving their infant son behind at the Livingston County Courthouse in Chillicothe.
They allegedly left the young boy with no food, clothes or plan for his care - with police saying they did so 'without remorse and without ensuring proper care.'
They've both been charged with child neglect and are expected to appear in court Monday for a bond hearing.
Cops say the couple showed up to the courthouse the day before for a routine drug screening with a Missouri Department of Social Services investigator, which was part of an ongoing child welfare case.
Jeremy reportedly tested clean but Jessica's mouth swab came back positive for methamphetamine.
This led to a social worker recommending a 'safety plan' to protect the child.
But instead of cooperating, Jeremy allegedly refused all options - including having Jessica stay away from the home, having him and the baby leave the house or even allowing the child to stay with a relative.
'The investigator explained that due to the drug test coming back positive, she couldn't leave the baby with them,' the Chillicothe Police Department stated in the couple's probable cause affidavits.
Officers say the Lamps returned to the courthouse the next day and left their child behind 'without remorse and without ensuring proper care.'
'Jeremy and Jessica then left the courthouse without the child,' police wrote, adding that the boy had been left with no clothes, food or other infant care.
The couple was later found at a nearby medical center, where they were arrested.
Jeremy allegedly admitted to abandoning the child, saying: 'The way I looked at it was that they were gonna take him anyway.'
He also told officers that 'none of the options' the court presented were acceptable, according to his statement.
'Jeremy said that none of the options were viable. He said that Children's Division told him that they would take the child so he left Victim 1 with them,' the probable cause statements read.
'When I questioned him about this he said 'the way I looked at it was that, they were gonna take him anyway.'
Both Jeremy and Jessica have prior criminal convictions, including assault and DWI charges for him and child endangerment for her.
Authorities say the child is now in the custody of Missouri Children's Division.
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Daily Mail
2 days ago
- Daily Mail
Little boy found abandoned at courthouse after desperate parents pleaded with cops to 'take him away'
A Missouri couple has been arrested after they allegedly abandoned their young son at a courthouse alone and pleaded with cops to 'take him away.' Jeremy Lamp, 36, and Jessica Lamp, 31, are accused of leaving their infant son behind at the Livingston County Courthouse in Chillicothe. They allegedly left the young boy with no food, clothes or plan for his care - with police saying they did so 'without remorse and without ensuring proper care.' They've both been charged with child neglect and are expected to appear in court Monday for a bond hearing. Cops say the couple showed up to the courthouse the day before for a routine drug screening with a Missouri Department of Social Services investigator, which was part of an ongoing child welfare case. Jeremy reportedly tested clean but Jessica's mouth swab came back positive for methamphetamine. This led to a social worker recommending a 'safety plan' to protect the child. But instead of cooperating, Jeremy allegedly refused all options - including having Jessica stay away from the home, having him and the baby leave the house or even allowing the child to stay with a relative. 'The investigator explained that due to the drug test coming back positive, she couldn't leave the baby with them,' the Chillicothe Police Department stated in the couple's probable cause affidavits. Officers say the Lamps returned to the courthouse the next day and left their child behind 'without remorse and without ensuring proper care.' 'Jeremy and Jessica then left the courthouse without the child,' police wrote, adding that the boy had been left with no clothes, food or other infant care. The couple was later found at a nearby medical center, where they were arrested. Jeremy allegedly admitted to abandoning the child, saying: 'The way I looked at it was that they were gonna take him anyway.' He also told officers that 'none of the options' the court presented were acceptable, according to his statement. 'Jeremy said that none of the options were viable. He said that Children's Division told him that they would take the child so he left Victim 1 with them,' the probable cause statements read. 'When I questioned him about this he said 'the way I looked at it was that, they were gonna take him anyway.' Both Jeremy and Jessica have prior criminal convictions, including assault and DWI charges for him and child endangerment for her. Authorities say the child is now in the custody of Missouri Children's Division.


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REVEALED: Why daughter of privilege had FOUR children taken into custody amid fears for their lives - years before she killed her fifth baby
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Franklin Nooe, treatment director of a sex assault clinic who counselled Gordon's first victim, described him as a sociopath in the same category as Bundy: 'That's the 5 per cent of the rapists, that's your Ted Bundys … that obviously enjoy it. They are a progressive kind of rapist that would … go from just raping, to raping and murdering'. Within three weeks of carrying out the attack, Gordon broke into the home of a second woman armed with a set of knives. But as he crept into her bedroom Gordon was startled to find her husband home. Gordon battered him around the head with a shovel before fleeing. He was jailed for 40 years, serving half of that in the US before being deported back to the UK. He hid his appalling criminal history from Marten when they met in 2016. It wasn't until he assaulted two police officers in hospital after Marten gave birth under a false name that she learnt he was a violent rapist considered at 'high risk' of reoffending. 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