People of Michigan v. Nancy Ann Gerwatowski

CourtMichigan Court of Appeals
DecidedFebruary 4, 2026
Docket374157
StatusPublished

This text of People of Michigan v. Nancy Ann Gerwatowski (People of Michigan v. Nancy Ann Gerwatowski) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Michigan Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
People of Michigan v. Nancy Ann Gerwatowski, (Mich. Ct. App. 2026).

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If this opinion indicates that it is “FOR PUBLICATION,” it is subject to revision until final publication in the Michigan Appeals Reports.

STATE OF MICHIGAN

COURT OF APPEALS

PEOPLE OF THE STATE OF MICHIGAN, FOR PUBLICATION February 04, 2026 Plaintiff-Appellee, 11:17 AM

v No. 374157 Mackinac Circuit Court NANCY ANN GERWATOWSKI, LC No. 22-004294-FC

Defendant-Appellant.

Before: WALLACE, P.J., and RIORDAN and REDFORD, JJ.

RIORDAN, J.

In 1997, the decomposing remains of an infant were found in a park latrine at Garnet Lake State Forest campground, in a remote area of Mackinac County in Michigan’s Upper Peninsula. Because of where the child’s body was located, the child was given the name “Baby Garnet.” The child appeared to have been birthed after a full-term pregnancy, but no cause of death could be determined, and the investigation of her death became a cold case. Eventually, with the passage of 25 years, advances in genetic technology allowed officials to identify defendant as Baby Garnet’s mother, and she is now charged with the open murder and involuntary manslaughter of the infant.

This appeal concerns the admissibility of statements defendant made to two police officers in which she confessed to being Baby Garnet’s mother, disposing of the infant’s body, and of other conduct during the pregnancy. For the reasons set forth, we affirm the trial court in all respects.

I. FACTS

Approximately two and a half decades after Baby Garnet’s remains were found, two Michigan law enforcement officers made use of recent advances in DNA technology to identify defendant as the probable mother. They, along with two local officers, in possession of a warrant for defendant’s DNA, traveled to her home in the state of Wyoming. They asked her to come to the local sheriff’s office to discuss an investigation the subject of which they did not identify. Rather than accompany the officers, defendant invited them inside her home. Once inside, the officers, seated with defendant at her kitchen table, told defendant they believed she was Baby Garnet’s mother and that they believed defendant knew this to be true. After some discussion, the

-1- officers eventually told defendant that she had a legal right to refuse to come to the local sheriff’s office, and they then let her bring her dog into the house and make arrangements for its care. The officers, at defendant’s request, gave her a ride to the sheriff’s office.

At the sheriff’s office, the officers read defendant her Miranda1 rights. Defendant stated that she understood her rights and did not wish to speak. She asked whether there was an attorney for her, and the officers explained that they did not bring one. They explained that she was entitled to consult any attorney she wished, but she was not entitled to a court-appointed attorney until she was arrested. The officers executed the search warrant to obtain a DNA sample from defendant and advised her that she would “be left to watch” while they pieced the story together. They then described that there are two kinds of persons who commit the type of act they were investigating— those who made a bad decision, or those who are monsters. The officers gave their contact information to her and warned that they would be leaving for Michigan the next day and that she should expect to see them again. Defendant then left the sheriff’s station and went home.

A few hours later, defendant reached out to speak to the officers and she went back to the sheriff’s office. The officers again read defendant’s Miranda rights to her, told her that she did not need to speak, and invited her to tell them about Baby Garnet. The officers again explained that they did not bring attorneys and, because she was not under arrest, she was not entitled to a court-appointed attorney. Thus, the officers explained, an attorney was her right but also her responsibility. They asked if she would waive her rights and speak to them, and she replied “I guess, yeah.”

During that second interview at the sheriff’s office, defendant admitted that she was Baby Garnet’s mother. She explained that she had been going through a divorce, was unstable, her ex- husband “was drinking a lot and running around,” and defendant began to do the same. Defendant stated that when she discovered that she was pregnant, she “didn’t know what to do right away, so [she] just didn’t do anything.” She recalled that she went to a doctor, only one time, and told the doctor that she was thinking about getting an abortion, which seemed to upset the doctor. The doctor told defendant that they did not perform those procedures and referred her to a practitioner in the nearby City of Marquette in Michigan’s Upper Peninsula. Defendant also explained that, at the time, her car was “goofed up,” and she “wasn’t close enough to anybody to ask for help.” Defendant told the officers that she wanted to keep the baby, but a divorce attorney told her that being pregnant by someone else might adversely affect her ongoing custody proceedings involving her other children.

She told the officers that she began having labor pains over a weekend while her children were away, and she took a bath in the hope that the pains would go away so that she “could figure out what to do,” and “it just happened a lot faster than [she] expected.” She gave birth over the course of what felt like “hours and hours,” during which the baby became stuck partway during birth, was neither breathing nor crying, and “was all blue.” Defendant had to forcibly remove Baby Garnet from her body after Baby Garnet became stuck, and defendant explained that she lost a lot of blood, panicked, did not know what to do, and then “just finally decided that nobody would

1 Miranda v Arizona, 384 US 436; 86 S Ct 1602; 16 L Ed 2d 694 (1966).

-2- know.” She did not recall whether she had a cellular phone to call anyone at that time. The officers arrested her after these statements.

The trial court denied defendant’s motions to suppress the statements she made to the police officers. It made specific findings that defendant was not in custody when she spoke with the officers in her home and that her statements regarding her contemplated abortion and lack of prenatal care were relevant to the case and not unfairly prejudicial.

Defendant now appeals by leave granted.2

II. ADMISSIBILITY OF DEFENDANT’S CONFESSION

Defendant first argues that her confession was obtained in violation of her Fifth Amendment rights and should therefore be excluded. We disagree because defendant was not subject to custodial interrogation, and her eventual statements during the second interview were voluntary.

A trial court’s decision whether to suppress evidence is reviewed de novo, but any underlying factual findings are reviewed for clear error. People v Stewart, 512 Mich 472, 480; 999 NW2d 717 (2023). “The ultimate question whether a person was ‘in custody’ for purposes of Miranda warnings is a mixed question of fact and law, which must be answered independently by the reviewing court after review de novo of the record.” People v Barritt, 325 Mich App 556, 561; 926 NW2d 811 (2018) (quotation marks and citation omitted). This Court reviews de novo whether a statement was voluntary, with deference to the trial court’s assessment of witness credibility. People v Ryan, 295 Mich App 388, 396; 819 NW2d 55 (2012). “To the extent that a trial court’s ruling on a motion to suppress involves an interpretation of the law or the application of a constitutional standard to uncontested facts, our review is de novo.” People v Clark, 330 Mich App 392, 415; 948 NW2d 604 (2019) (quotation marks and citation omitted).

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People of Michigan v. Nancy Ann Gerwatowski, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-of-michigan-v-nancy-ann-gerwatowski-michctapp-2026.