Lost innocence: Baby April Whiteside case resonates 10 years later

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(Alex T. Paschal - SVN)
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ROCK FALLS – When word spread that a bludgeoned toddler was among four people found dead in a Rock Falls apartment in June, the shaken community responded with a mix of sorrow and anger.

For people who had been around awhile, that awful feeling was familiar. They remembered the last time a child was killed in their town, nearly a decade earlier.

On April 10, 1999, three boys riding their bikes on Riverdale Road along the Hennepin Feeder Canal, stumbled across the body of a dark-haired, 7-pound baby. The girl, whose identity was not immediately known, became known as Baby April Whiteside.

Her mother, then 21
and pregnant again, was her killer.

That day, Whiteside County Sheriff’s Department Chief Deputy Larry Van Dyke was called to the canal. He had been with the department 8 years at that point, and never had seen a case like this one.

“We respond to so many different types of tragedies,” Van Dyke said. “It’s something that I guess you just never get used to.”

Although the details of that day have become fuzzy over the years, the emotion remains the same, he said.

“You just keep wondering why someone would do something like this,” he said, “and how it could be prevented.”

Two days after the gruesome discovery, an autopsy was unable to determine an exact cause of death, but “asphyxia or willful neglect” could not be ruled out, according to court documents.

Tips to Whiteside County Crime Stoppers led investigators to a Sterling woman, who denied the child was hers. It would take more than a year for DNA tests to confirm that Catalina Mendoza was indeed Baby April’s mother.

Mendoza, charged with first-degree murder in May 2000, told investigators she delivered the baby by the side of a road, cut the umbilical cord with a flathead screwdriver, then drove to the canal and threw the baby in.

In January 2001, she pleaded guilty to second-degree murder. She was sentenced to 17 years in prison the following March.

The prosecutor, Whiteside County State’s Attorney Gary Spencer, believes the sentence was just.

“I thought then, and I think now, that there is a part of every human being who feels ‘an eye for an eye,’” Spencer said. “I think that given her age and the circumstances and the trauma that Catalina Mendoza had gone through in her life, the penalty of 17 years was appropriate.”

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