Hannah McMillin Murders 1 Month Old Son

Hannah McMillin is a killer from North Dakota who was convicted of the murder of her one month old son at a hotel

According to court documents Hannah McMillin was saying at a North Dakota with her husband Tank McMillin when she would smother her one month old son with a pillow. After the boy died Hannah would leave the room and went to the hotel spa

Authorities would be called to the hotel room where they would find the boy dead as well as a pillow with an imprint of the infant’s face in it

Hannah McMillin would be arrested, convicted and sentenced to life in prison

Tank McMillin would receive three and a half years in prison for his role in the murder

Hannah McMillin Now

hannah mcmillin today
NameMCMILLIN, HANNAH  SAGE
Date of Birth11/15/2000
Est. Release Date01/01/2100
FacilityDakota Womens Correctional and Rehabilitation Center    
440 Mckenzie Street  New England, ND58647

Hannah McMillin Case

A 21-year-old mother in North Dakota may spend the remainder of her days behind bars for the death of her 1-month-old son in a local hotel room almost three years ago.

Williams County District Court Judge Benjamen J. Johnson on Friday sentenced Hannah Sage McMillin to life in prison with the possibility of parole in the smothering-by-pillow death of her infant son in 2019, court records reviewed by Law&Crime show.

McMillin last year entered an Alford plea to the charge of murder in connection with her son’s death. Also known as a “best-interests plea,” an Alford plea means McMillin essentially accepts the result of a guilty plea while also claiming innocence and acknowledging the evidence was sufficient to convict.

“This is a tragedy for everyone involved,” Judge Johnson said before handing down the sentence, per The Associated Press.

Because she entered the Alford plea without reaching a deal with prosecutors, Hannah McMillin faced a maximum sentence of life without the possibility of parole. The only major difference in the end for her sentencing was the possibility of parole.

Officers with the Williston Police Department in April 2019 responded to a 911 call concerning a baby that was not breathing at the Four Points by Sheraton located on 2nd Avenue West, the Bismarck Tribune reported. Upon arriving at the scene, first responders found the infant unresponsive inside a room being rented by McMillin and her husband, Tank McMillin.

The baby was reportedly found underneath a pile of pillows, per a probable cause affidavit. Prosecutors reportedly said that one of the pillows located near the boy’s body had “what appeared to be the imprint of a small human face” on it.

Paramedics reportedly tried to resuscitate the child and transported him to a nearby hospital where he was pronounced dead. The child reportedly sustained severe bruises that covered most of his body, including his stomach, back, sides, upper buttocks and feet.

After smothering the child, Hannah McMillin allegedly went to the pool/spa facilities in the hotel.

She and her husband were both taken into custody and initially charged with one count each of Class A felony child abuse, per court records.

According to Williams County Assistant State’s Attorney Nathan Madden, McMillin confessed to killing the child during a subsequent interview with investigators, the Williston Herald reported. She reportedly told police that when the child would not stop crying, she attempted to quiet him by squeezing him. When that did not work, she allegedly placed several pillows over and around the baby’s face and left them there until he ceased crying. McMillin reportedly said she did not want the baby’s cries to wake her husband.

An autopsy performed by the North Dakota Medical Examiner’s Office reportedly determined that the child’s death was a homicide caused by “forcible smothering.” Following the release of the medical examiner’s report, the charge against McMillin was upgraded to murder.

In court documents filed last year, prosecutors said that tests performed on the area of the pillow that appeared to have a face imprint came back positive for containing the baby’s DNA.

Hannah McMillin last year attempted to withdraw her Alford plea after her attorney, Kevin McCabe, reportedly said her husband admitted to his role in the infant’s death on recorded calls made from jail. That motion to withdraw McMillin’s plea was itself withdrawn last month, court records show.

Tank McMillin in 2020 pleaded guilty to felony child abuse and was sentenced to 3.5 years in prison and an additional five years of probation, per court records.

In addition to the prison sentence, Judge Johnson ordered McMillin to remain on parole for the remainder of her life and to register as an offender against children.

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