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Sunday, October 08, 2000

Chance meeting at store led to killing, baby theft


Woman was not necessarily psychotic, psychiatrists say

By Amy Beth Graves
The Associated Press

        RAVENNA, Ohio — They met by chance in the infants and toddlers section of a Wal-Mart. One woman was shopping for baby clothes. The other was looking for a baby.

        They talked casually about pregnancies and learned they lived just blocks from each other. Theresa Andrews told Michelle Bica that she was due to give birth to a boy in about a month.

Andrews
Mrs. Andrews
Bica
Mrs. Bica
        The conversation turned out to be a death sentence for Mrs. Andrews.

        Mrs. Bica, 39, had lied to neighbors, relatives and even her own husband for months, telling them she was pregnant. With her fake due date approaching fast — her weight made it appear she could be pregnant — Mrs. Bica was desperate to produce a baby.

        On Sept. 27, police say, Mrs. Bica lured the 23-year-old Mrs. Andrews to her house by pretending she wanted to buy the Jeep that Mrs. Andrews and her husband, Jon, were selling.

        Just inside the back door of her laundry room, Mrs. Bica killed Theresa Andrews with a single shot to the back, then immediately performed a crude Caesarean section to deliver the baby.

        Mrs. Bica passed the baby off as her own until five days later, when she committed suicide in a locked bedroom as police arrived to question her about calls made to the Andrews' house. The baby was sleeping in the adjacent nursery.

        The case stunned this quiet community of 12,000 located about 30 miles southeast of Cleveland, a town better known for its hot-air balloon festival.

        “It's very difficult for a small town like ours to have to go through this sort of tragedy,” said Mayor Paul Jones. “We're the kind of town where everyone knows everyone.”
       

Husband was misled

        Police say it took Mrs. Bica just six hours to lure Mrs. Andrews to her home, kill her and remove the baby, bury Mrs. Andrews' body in the dirt floor of the Bica garage, clean up the bloody mess and then call her husband to tell him she had just given birth to a boy at home.

        When Thomas Bica, a county corrections officer, asked his wife why she hadn't called to say she was going into labor, she told him she was in too much pain.

        Neighbors described Thomas Bica as a friendly man who stutters and appears to be gullible. He met Michelle in 1994 while she served a jail sentence for receiving stolen property. A 1997 work evaluation said he was sometimes “out of touch with common-sensical type of behavior.”

        Police said evidence shows Mrs. Bica acted alone and her husband has not been charged. DNA tests confirmed the baby was the Andrews' child.

        “Michelle Zonko Bica has been living a life of fiction and deception,” Thomas Bica, 41, said in a statement Friday. “Thomas Bica and family members truly believed that Michelle was pregnant.”

        He said he would not attend his wife's funeral.
       

Deep deception

        The depth of Michelle Bica's deception shocked people who knew her.

        She started telling people she was pregnant in December. She showed off an ultrasound picture — possibly from a previous miscarriage — talked about doctor appointments, had people touch her abdomen and held a baby shower.

        She and her husband toured the birthing facilities at Akron General Medical Center. They met with a priest to talk about the child's christening and rented a hall for the celebration.

        Psychiatrists said she wasn't necessarily psychotic.

        “The urge to have a baby can be very strong. Sometimes when there is a miscarriage, a woman feels she cannot have a baby and that desperation becomes so much stronger,” said Phillip Resnick, professor of psychiatry at Case Western Reserve University.

Unanswered questions

[photo] Jon Andrews kisses his son, Oscar Gavin Andrews, as he prepared to bring him home last Thursday.
(Associated Press photo)
| ZOOM |
        Jon Andrews is in seclusion with his first child, who was named Oscar as his wife had wished. The boy is healthy and weighs almost 9 pounds now. A memorial service for Theresa Andrews was scheduled for today.

        Some questions may never be answered. Investigators can't figure out how Mrs. Bica managed to move the victim's body from her house to her detached garage about 10 feet away in daylight and bury it without anyone knowing.

        They don't know what she used to cut Theresa Andrews open or how she did it without hurting the baby.

        Such incisions are not easy, said Dinesh Shah, director of maternal-fetal medicine for University Hospitals of Cleveland.

        Neighbor Renee Pinkley is still unnerved by one of her last conversations with Mrs. Bica.

        “She said 'You can't trust anybody.' It's sick she would say that. It gives me the creeps knowing her,” she said. “She was in my home and watched my girls. To think she seemed so normal.”

       



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