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Left: Dakota Taylor (McDuffie County Sheriff”s Office). Top right: Micah Taylor (Deloach McKerley-Prescott Funeral Home). Bottom right: Caleb Taylor (Forever Missed).
In a harrowing case out of Georgia, a young mother stands accused of the most unthinkable crime—taking the lives of her own children. Twenty-one-year-old Dakota Taylor has allegedly confessed to suffocating her two infant sons, a revelation that has sent shockwaves through the community.
The legal troubles began for Taylor in November 2025 when she was arrested following the death of her 8-month-old son, Caleb, earlier that year. However, this was not the first tragedy linked to Taylor. She was already under investigation for the death of her 7-month-old son, Micah, who passed away in 2021. As authorities delve deeper into Taylor’s troubling history, a concerning pattern emerges, painting a more comprehensive picture of her interactions with the Georgia Division of Family and Children Services (DFCS) and her past as a juvenile.
According to a report by WRDW, a CBS affiliate, Taylor’s issues with DFCS began when she was still a teenager. At that time, she was living in a group home with her two daughters and pregnant with Micah. Alarming behaviors were noted, including threats made via Twitter and text messages where she expressed a desire to harm her daughters. These red flags led DFCS to intervene, ultimately removing the girls from her care and placing them into foster homes. The children were subsequently adopted, as Taylor was deemed a risk to their safety, lacking the necessary parental attachment and suitability.
The tragic tale of Micah’s short life unfolded in early 2021. After his birth, Taylor briefly fled the group home but returned shortly thereafter. Just nine days later, Micah was found lifeless in a baby swing, his tiny body blue and unresponsive despite efforts to revive him. Witnesses noted Taylor’s unsettlingly calm demeanor when police arrived on the scene, captured in body camera footage that highlighted her lack of emotion.
As details of this heartbreaking case continue to unravel, they serve as a grim reminder of the vulnerabilities within the child welfare system and the complexities of ensuring the safety of its youngest charges. The community, grappling with the weight of such loss, is left to ponder how these tragic events might have been prevented.
Police responded to the group home. In body camera footage, officers described Taylor’s demeanor as “nonchalant” and unemotional.
In January 2025, her second son, Caleb, died after Taylor brought him to a family member’s house, police said. The family member reportedly said Caleb was covered by a blanket when he and his mother arrived, and “his hands were blue.” Caleb was unresponsive and taken to a hospital, where he later died.
WRDW reported that an inmate told a GBI agent that Taylor allegedly admitted to killing Caleb before bringing him to her relative’s house. The inmate reportedly said Taylor knew Caleb was dead when she drove him to the relative’s house.
According to WRDW, investigators spoke to Micah’s father in October 2023, two years after his son’s death. He reportedly told investigators that Taylor admitted to killing Micah, saying in a recorded interview, “She told me she cut the inside of my son’s nose and held a COVID mask over his face until he wasn’t breathing anymore.”
Taylor’s half-sister provided a similar account of what Taylor told her about Micah’s death, including that she pinched the baby’s nose closed and held her hand over his face “until he turned different colors until he wasn’t moving anymore.”
Taylor was charged with murder in two different counties in connection with both of her sons’ deaths. During a bond hearing in Jefferson County on Tuesday, Taylor was granted a $150,000 cash bond and a $300,000 property bond, which her family said she would not have the financial means to post. She was not granted bond in DeKalb County. Her next court appearance is April 7 in DeKalb County.