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Suspect in fetus theft headed back to Missouri

Montgomery waives right to Kansas hearing; town still shaken

Pallbearers carry the casket of murder victim Bobbie Jo Stinnett in Skidmore
Dave Kaup / Reuters
Zeb Stinnett, far right, watches as pallbearers carry the casket containing his wife, Bobbie Jo Stinnett, to her grave south of Skidmore, Mo., Tuesday.
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Dec. 22: Pastor Harold Hamon, who presided over Bobbie Jo Stinnett's funeral, talks with "Today" host Lester Holt about the tragedy.

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Dec. 21: The first photograph of the slain woman's baby, Victoria Jo Stinnett, has been released. NBC’s Michelle Hofland reports.

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msnbc.com staff and news service reports
updated 3:40 p.m. ET Dec. 23, 2004

Lisa Montgomery is headed to back Missouri, where she's accused of killing a woman and cutting a fetus from her body, according to the U.S. Attorney's Office in the Western District of Missouri. 

A statement on the agency's Web site says Montgomery waived her right to a preliminary hearing in a Kansas City, Kansas, courtroom Thursday morning, clearing the way for her transfer to Missouri.

Federal prosecutors have charged Montgomery with kidnapping resulting in death. She's accused of strangling 23-year-old Bobbie Jo Stinnett in Skidmore, Mo., then cutting the baby from her womb.

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KSNT-TV in Kansas reported that Montgomery wore an orange jumpsuit to her court appearance. As she left from the courtroom, the station reported, she briefly glanced back toward her husband, who was sitting in the front row.

Montgomery is scheduled to make an initial appearance before a federal judge Tuesday and has a detention hearing Thursday.

Hundreds mourn Stinnett's death
Meanwhile, Stinnett's hometown of Marysville, Mo., is still reeling from the gruesome crime.  Hundreds of mourners gathered Tuesday in this small northwestern Missouri farming community for her funeral. The crowd filled the flower-filled Price Funeral Home and overflowed into the entrance for the service. Cars lined the streets on a bitter cold day.

“I’ve known her since she was a baby,” said family friend Carl Montgomery. “She grew up into a beautiful swan.”

Stinnett’s mother found her eight-months-pregnant daughter in a pool of blood in her small home Dec. 16; the baby she was carrying missing. Montgomery, 36, of Melvern, Kan. — a woman Stinnett knew from dog breeding and dog shows, and no relation to the family friend — was charged with kidnapping resulting in death.

Family and friends said Montgomery, arrested Dec. 17, tried to pass off Stinnett’s baby as her own. The child, who has been named Victoria Jo Stinnett, spent the weekend in a Topeka, Kan., hospital before going home Monday afternoon with her father, Zeb Stinnett, and another relative.

The Rev. Harold Hamon, who married the Stinnetts in spring 2003 at the Skidmore Christian Church, spoke at the funeral; burial was to follow at a cemetery in Skidmore.

Many mourners were unable to get into the service. Others, some crying and exchanging hugs, took turns letting each other get closer to the sanctuary. One tearful mourner carried a dozen pink roses but became so distraught she had to be taken outside.

Afterward, pallbearers waited outside as the gold coffin was placed into a hearse.

Women reportedly acquainted through shows
The FBI would not comment on whether Stinnett and Montgomery had met before Thursday. But a Nebraska dog trainer who planned to attend the funeral said the two women had chatted on the Internet — and attended the same dog shows.

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Digital breadcrumbs
MSNBC.com’s Bob Sullivan talks about the Internet’s role in the arrest of Lisa Montgomery.

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The two were even photographed together at a dog show in Abilene, Kan., in April, said Nancy Strudl of Omaha, Neb.

Strudl recalled Stinnett was shy but “a sweetheart after you got to know her.” She said Stinnett knew so much about the genetics of the rat terrier breed that she gave advice to others. She also said Stinnett “stood up” for Lisa Montgomery, whom Strudl accused of misrepresenting the pedigree of dogs she sold.

“She said, ‘Maybe it was just a misunderstanding,”’ Strudl said. “She was so trusting, and she convinced them to give (Montgomery) another chance.”

Other breeders were skeptical when Lisa Montgomery said she was pregnant — she “never gained an ounce,” Strudl said.

“She told us all she was pregnant with twins, and about a month and a half ago her messages were, ‘I lost one of the twins. It’s so terrible, but they saved one twin,”’ Strudl said. “We didn’t believe she was pregnant. I don’t know how she fooled her family and community.”

On Monday, Montgomery’s husband said he believed the baby his wife presented to him was theirs. “I had no idea,” Kevin Montgomery said when asked about his wife’s alleged actions. He has not been charged, and prosecutors have not said if they suspect he knew anything.

The Associated Press contributed to this report.

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