Woman sought in baby kidnapping surrenders
Mom finds kidnapped daughter six years later
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Carolyn Correa walks into the Philadelphia Police Department Special Victims Unit office to turn herself in.
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CNN's Martin Savidge reports the woman accused of kidnapping a 10-day-old girl six years ago has surrendered to police.
KYW's Walt Hunter on the case of a Pennsylvania child who was believed to have died in a fire but who was in fact kidnapped.
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PHILADELPHIA, Pennsylvania (CNN) -- A woman accused of kidnapping a 10-day-old girl six years ago has surrendered to police in Philadelphia and is being questioned by detectives, CNN has learned.
Carolyn Correa, 41, walked into the Philadelphia Police Department Special Victims Unit office in downtown Philadelphia just after 4:30 p.m. Tuesday with her attorney, Jeffrey Zucker, police said.
"We are pleased that this phase of a complex, protracted, and emotionally charged investigation has been completed with the subject's arrest," said Philadelphia Capt. John Darby.
Correa had been sought in connection with the kidnapping of the infant, Delimar Vera, who was sleeping in her room when a fire broke out at the two-story house in Philadelphia December 15, 1997.
Luz Cuevas, the baby's mother, couldn't find Delimar when she ran into her room. She eventually ran out of the house, overcome by smoke and suffering burns on her face. Her two other children survived the fire.
Remains of the infant's body were never found, and police concluded they had been incinerated in the flames.
The official cause of the fire was listed as an overheated extension cord attached to a space heater.
But Cuevas never fully believed her daughter died in the fire.
In January, she attended a birthday party for the child of an acquaintance and was struck by the resemblance of a 6-year-old girl to herself and her other children.
Telling the girl she had bubble gum in her hair, Cuevas was able to take strands of her hair in hopes a DNA test would prove she was right, according to Philadelphia police Lt. Michael Boyle of the Special Victims Unit.
A state legislator helped put Cuevas in touch with police, who launched an investigation and had DNA tests performed that confirmed the girl is her daughter.
Police say Correa, a resident of Willingboro, New Jersey, a Philadelphia suburb, started the fire and kidnapped Delimar, whom she passed off as her own daughter.
Before the results of the DNA tests were in, officials placed the child in New Jersey state custody.
When police returned to Correa's home to confront her about the DNA results, she had fled, leaving behind three other children.
She had been a fugitive from multiple arrest warrants on charges that include arson, kidnapping and concealing the whereabouts of a child.
Philadelphia officials had ruled infant died in 1997 fire
Police declared Delimar Vera dead after a fire destroyed much of her home.
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Lt. Thomas McDevitt of the Special Victims Unit said Cuevas told police that Correa was a distant friend of a cousin of the baby's father, from whom she has separated.
Cuevas had met Correa the day before the fire, McDevitt said. Correa returned December 15, saying she had left her purse upstairs, he said.
The fire was discovered shortly after Correa left the house, McDevitt said.
It has not yet been determined when Delimar will be reunited with Cuevas.
Boyle said that when police told Cuevas about the DNA test results Saturday night she was "overwhelmed with joy."
"She sat there and shook and cried and kept saying, 'Thank you, thank you, thank you,'" Boyle said.
Police say they cannot fully explain why Delimar was declared killed.
Officers at the time found bone fragments they thought were the baby's remains, but tests later showed them to be nonhuman, McDevitt said.
When investigators returned to the scene, firemen had already dumped several hundred pounds of debris from the gutted bedroom in the back yard, McDevitt said.
The officers sifted through the debris but found mostly dry wool particles, which they were told resemble human ashes, but only those burned at 1,000 degrees for an hour or longer, McDevitt said.
The fire, which was confined to the bedroom, lasted only about 15 minutes and was nowhere near 1,000 degrees, McDevitt said.
McDevitt admitted this scenario is an explanation only "up to a point." On the other hand, officers had no reason to suspect arson or a kidnapping, he said.
CNN's Susan Chun and CNN.com's David Osier contributed to this story.