Two teens who pleaded guilty to a March 2019 infanticide in Neptune Township have been sentenced to a combined 15 years in prison, Monmouth County Prosecutor Christopher J. Gramiccioni announced.
Jada M. McClain, now 20, of Neptune Township, was sentenced to 10 years in a New Jersey State prison by Monmouth County Superior Court Judge David F. Bauman, after pleading guilty to first-degree aggravated manslaughter.
The sentence is subject to the provisions of the No Early Release Act, (NERA), requiring McClain to serve 85 percent of the sentence imposed before becoming eligible for release on parole.
Quaimere Mohammed, now 21, also of Neptune Township, was sentenced to five years after he pleaded guilty to second-degree disturbing or desecrating human remains in connection with the death of a newborn baby.
The case background …
On April 4, 2019, the Asbury Park Police Department received a report that Jada McClain, a student at Neptune Township Regional High School, had recently given birth, and that the newborn was deceased. The investigation was referred to the Neptune Township police, who, together with investigators from the Monmouth County Prosecutor’s Office Major Crimes Unit, launched an investigation into the matter.
The joint investigation revealed that McClain had become pregnant by her boyfriend, Quaimere Mohammed, also a student, sometime in July 2018.
McClain explained to investigators that she hid the fact that she was pregnant from her parents and that she gave birth to a boy in the early morning hours of March 29, 2019, in her home.
After giving birth to the child, McClain pressed her hands on the boy’s chest until he stopped breathing. McClain contacted Mohammed, and later that morning, the two disposed of the child’s body in a dumpster on Monroe Avenue in Asbury Park. Detectives later recovered surveillance video that captured Mohammed disposing the child’s body near the Washington Village apartment complex.
Detectives learned that the contents of the dumpster, including the newborn’s remains, were transported to the Monmouth County Reclamation Center in Tinton Falls, where they were compacted and buried. The infant’s body was never recovered.
“This case is a horrible tragedy,” Gramiccioni said. “An infant is dead and two young people are going to prison. New Jersey’s Safe Haven Protection Act provides a legal, safe, and confidential process for anyone wishing to relinquish custody of a newborn. It is important that people be made aware of this law.”
On Aug. 7, 2000, the New Jersey Safe Haven Infant Protection Act became law. The law allows a parent who is unable or unwilling to care for an infant to give up custody of a baby who is less than 30 days old, safely, legally, and anonymously. All that is required is that the baby be brought to a hospital emergency room or police station in New Jersey. As long as the child shows no signs of intentional abuse, no names or other information is required from the person delivering the baby.
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