Mom killed newborn by putting him in refrigerator

Angela Blackwell, center, appears in Magistrate's Court in Chester County for a brief hearing on Tuesday, Aug. 23, 2016, in Chester, S.C. Blackwell is charged with homicide by child abuse and authorities say she left her 4-day-old son in a running refrigerator for three hours in February 2016 causing the boy to die from hypothermia.
Angela Blackwell, center, appears in Magistrate's Court in Chester County for a brief hearing on Tuesday, Aug. 23, 2016, in Chester, S.C. Blackwell is charged with homicide by child abuse and authorities say she left her 4-day-old son in a running refrigerator for three hours in February 2016 causing the boy to die from hypothermia.

CHESTER, S.C. (AP) - A South Carolina mother killed her 4-day-old-son by putting him in the refrigerator for three hours, authorities said.

Angela Blackwell is charged with homicide by child abuse.

During a brief court appearance on Tuesday, the judge explained because of the severity of the charges no bond could be set at this initial hearing, in accordance to state law.

She only nodded and shook her head, leaving the small courtroom after a few minutes without a sound.

Blackwell, 27, was arrested Monday, nearly six months after her son died. Investigators said they have spent that time taking statements and getting forensic tests done on the baby.

An autopsy showed that the boy, William David Blackwell, died from hypothermia with asphyxiation from being placed in the cold, according to Chester County Coroner Terry Tinker. First-responders tried to revive him Feb. 27, but he was pronounced dead at a hospital.

The baby's grandfather, Billy Lewis, told reporters gathered at his home before his bond hearing that Blackwell was sad around the time of her baby's birth, but appeared to be cheered up after her son was born.

"She didn't do it. We don't know who did it, but she didn't do it," said Lewis, who added there were other people in the home, but wouldn't speculate on how the baby might have ended up in the refrigerator.

Authorities also have not talked about why Blackwell may have placed in son in the refrigerator. Public defender William Frick represented her at Monday's hearing, but said he had just received the case and didn't know enough to talk about it. Blackwell's next court appearance is Nov. 10.

Neighbors said the Blackwells were nearly evicted from their home recently because the yard was a mess. Children's toys still are strewn in the backyard, and an old rusted car without an engine and a white hearse that has seen better days remain in the front yard. While everyone knew about their yard, no one seemed to really know them, neighbor Dot Corley said Tuesday.

"She didn't say anything to anybody that I know of," Corley said.