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Thursday, May 16
The Indiana Daily Student

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Authorities find body believed to be missing pregnant woman

CANTON, Ohio – A massive search ended in sadness Saturday when authorities announced they found a body believed to belong to a pregnant woman who vanished from her home a week earlier. A police officer believed to be the father of the unborn child was arrested on two counts of murder.\nJessie Davis, 26, who was due to deliver a baby girl on July 3, was reported missing after her mother found Davis’ 2-year-old son home alone, bedroom furniture toppled and bleach spilled on the floor.\nThe boy gave investigators their first clues. “Mommy was crying. Mommy broke the table. Mommy’s in rug,” the \nboy said.\nThousands of volunteers had searched for Davis over several days, while investigators continued to question Bobby Cutts Jr., 30, who is the father of Davis’ son but is married to another woman.\nInvestigators were mum on many details of their work until they announced Cutts was taken into custody Saturday and was to be arraigned on charges of murder in the deaths of Davis and her unborn child.\nThe Stark County Sheriff’s Department also said a woman’s body was recovered in Summit County at 3:30 p.m. Authorities did not give a location but said they believed it to be Davis.\nTelevision news footage taken from helicopters above Cuyahoga Valley National Park showed investigators riding off-road vehicles to reach an area that is heavily covered with trees and brush. It also show authorities carrying a body bag on a stretcher and loading it into a white van.\nRoger Riggins, an investigator with the Summit County medical examiner’s office, confirmed a body was found at the southeast edge of the park, about 25 miles from Davis’ home in Lake Township.\nTim Miller, director of Texas EquuSearch, an internationally active search group that organized the volunteer effort, said Davis’ mother, Patricia Porter, and other members of her family were called together and told about the body in late afternoon.\n“A lot of the community stopped their lives to looked for Jessie, and that meant so much to her and the entire family – that they knew they were not alone in this,” he said.\nDuring the investigation, a newborn baby girl was left on the doorstep of a home in a nearby county, raising questions about whether it belonged to Davis. DNA tests were being conducted when another woman confessed to leaving the child at the home.\nAn attorney for Davis’ mother said the family had a roller coaster ride of emotions and had no comment.\n“I’ve seen them laugh, cry, be angry – everything you can imagine,” Rick Pitinii said. “They need to be together, and they need to be alone, and they need to grieve.”\nCutts, a Canton police officer since 2000, has said he and his wife are separated and that she knew about the affair \nwith Davis.\nChief Deputy Rick Perez said the case was still being investigated. He would not comment on whether there were any other suspects.\nTelephone messages seeking comment were left at the office of Cutts’ lawyer, Bradley Iams, and the home and office of the Rev. C.A. Richmond, who is Cutts’ pastor. Iams’ home number is unlisted. Cutts’ wife also did not return a phone call.\nCutts has been on paid administrative leave from his job.\n“There is no denying that this has resulted in giving a black eye in the opinion of the local community as well as the opinion of the rest of the nation,” Canton Police Chief Dean McKimm said of \nCutts’ arrest.\nThe police department had tried to fire Cutts in 2003 when authorities conducting a drug raid on his cousin’s home found Cutts’ handgun hidden under a mattress. Canton police officials said Cutts gave the gun to his cousin for protection and said Cutts was lying when he reported the gun stolen. A federal arbitrator ordered the city to reinstate the officer, saying police had not proved \nthe allegation.\nCutts pleaded no contest to a disorderly conduct charge in 1998 after he was accused of breaking into the home of a former girlfriend. He was sentenced to three \nyears’ probation.

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