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Background: Oklahoma County Sheriff”s Office vehicle parked outside of the Oklahoma County Detention Center. Inset: Holly Sheppard
For years, the person responsible for an infant’s death in Oklahoma was unclear to authorities — but when a similar tragedy occurred five years later, investigators were finally able to track down a lead.
A 2-month-old child was brought to an Oklahoma hospital on June 14, 2023, seizing with internal bleeding. Through the police’s investigation, they were able to determine that Holly Sheppard had been babysitting the child in Ponca City, Kay County, Oklahoma.
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Sheppard, 28, was the one who called police, but allegedly kept changing her story about how the child was injured, according to Kay NewsCow. A police report shared by the outlet showed Sheppard’s eventual explanation — that she had “accidentally tripped” and dropped the baby.
The mother of the child reportedly told police she had sought out a babysitter on Facebook and hired Sheppard to watch her child three days before. The investigation progressed, and Sheppard was arrested for child abuse. In November 2024, she was given a sentence of life in prison with the possibility of release after 25 years.
Startling new discoveries have since come to light.
Sheppard was charged on Monday with first-degree murder in the death of a child by injuring, torturing, or maiming in connection with the 2018 death of a 22-day-old infant in Oklahoma County. She is being held without bond in the Oklahoma County Detention Center.
The infant was brought to an Oklahoma City hospital in January 2018 with “non-accidental abusive head trauma,” police told local outlet KOKH. The baby died a few days later from what authorities believed was blunt force trauma to the head.
While this infant’s mother reportedly told police she, too, had found Sheppard, who was 21 at the time, on Facebook and left her child in her care, investigators were unable to determine — or prove — that Sheppard was the one watching the child when they were hurt. For more than five years, no one was charged in the case — until the 2023 tragedy.
According to Kay NewsCow, Oklahoma City police officer Corey Carden returned to the 2018 case when he heard about the Ponca City child’s injury. He reportedly spoke with a local child abuse expert and pediatrician, who found similarities in the two cases. Police are said to have recognized a pattern and presented it to the Oklahoma County District Attorney’s Office, which led to the new charge.
Ponca City Deputy Chief of Police Josh Henderson told KOKH that Sheppard’s crimes were “inexcusable and represent a profound betrayal of the trust placed in someone responsible for a child’s care.”
“No child should ever suffer harm at the hands of those entrusted with their safety. We are grateful for the opportunity to assist other agencies across Oklahoma in their pursuit of justice in heartbreaking cases such as these,” he added.
The child injured in 2023 made “remarkable progress” in the weeks following her injury, The Bull Tulsa, a local radio station, reported at the time. A Facebook account titled “Korra’s Journey,” which appears to document the recovery of the victim, has shared updates.
When Sheppard was sentenced for the child abuse charge, the account wrote, “Tomorrow is the day. The day that we sit in that courtroom reliving all the trauma like it happened yesterday. All the horrific memories and feelings flood back as we sit and listen. Tomorrow we will be able to stand up against evil and be Korras voice.”
On Tuesday, when news broke of Sheppard’s arrest for the 2018 death, the account posted: “Justice for Baby Willow is finally happening,” in reference to that child victim.