âThis was not a crime of greed, this was not a crime of vengeance,â Judge P. Kevin Castel of Federal District Court in Manhattan said Monday when he imposed a 12-year prison sentence on Ann Pettway, who kidnapped baby Carlina White 25 years ago, raised her as her own, and then turned herself in when the young woman reconnected with her birth parents.
âIt was an act of selfishness, a crime of selfishness,â one which âinflicted a parentâs worst nightmare on a couple,â Castel concluded.

Joy White has described meeting Pettway, now 50, on the day her daughter disappeared. The Whites had brought their 19-day-old infant, who had a high fever, to Harlem Hospital in Manhattan on August 4, 1987. Dressed like a nurse, Pettway reportedly told Mrs. White, âDonât cry. Your daughter is going to be OK.â
Pettway brought the infant to her home in Bridgeport, Connecticut, and renamed her Nedjra Nance. In 1998, when Carlina White was 10, Pettway gave birth to a son and raised the two as brother and sister.
After that day in the hospital, Mrs. White didnât see her daughter again for 23 years. Carlina, who still goes by the name Nance. was living in Atlanta with her own daughter in 2010 when she found a picture of a âmissing childâ on the website of the National Center for Missing and Exploited Childrenâ that resembled her own baby photographs. She contacted the police and subsequently tracked down her biological parents. [She declined to comment to The Daily Beast for this story.]
As much as the Whites suffered during those 23 years, Pettwayâs eerie remark that Carlina would be âOKâ was most likely sincere.
âThe kidnapper desperately wants the baby, so sheâs not looking to abuse the child but to love her,â Dr. Phillip Resnick, director of forensic psychiatry at Case Western Reserve University in Cleveland, tells The Daily Beast. âMost snatched babies are well cared for.â
But the desire to nurture is born from blinding selfishness and little or no empathic capacity.
âThe most extreme example of this is when a woman takes another womanâs baby by cesarean section,â says Resnick. âHer selfish desire is so strong that sheâs not only willing to sacrifice the motherâs anguish to obtain a baby, but to also sacrifice the motherâs life.â In some instances, Resnick says, women are motivated to kidnap babies out of fear that their boyfriends or husbands will leave them if they cannot conceive.
While few details are known about the men in Pettwayâs life, her lawyers argued that their client was severely depressed when she kidnapped White as a result of her inability to properly bear her own child, having allegedly endured several stillbirths and miscarriages since she was 15. They also said Pettway was physically and emotionally abused as a child.
Pettwayâs history may partially explain her actions. Needless to say, it doesnât excuse them.
âIn a ânormalâ person, these painful experiences over a period of years can be digested and resolved by legal means through foster care and adoption,â says Dr. Stephen Reich, Director of the Forensic Psychology Group in New York City. âWhen these normal coping mechanisms are absent, only the naked inner need for a child is left, which must be satisfied at all costs.â
Reich attributes this behavior to a low âfrustration tolerance,â explaining that an upstanding citizen who is unable to conceive but desperately wants a child would be willing to work with agencies and obtain the child through legitimate means. Of course this process can take years, and in many kidnapping cases, the impulsive longing for a child overrides any willingness to deal with the emotional and financial strains of working with a legitimate adoption or foster care agency.
According to Reich, itâs highly probable that individuals who commit crimes like that for which Pettway was sentenced on Monday have borderline personalities. But very few of them are psychotic.
âThe individual who does this simply does not care how much damage is inflicted upon others, including the child, as long as her longing and desperate need to have a child is fulfilled,â says Reich, echoing Judge Castelâs words in sentencing Pettway. âItâs narcissism taken to the utmost extreme.â