PICTURED: Mother (36) accused of killing her newborn baby and throwing her in a bin with the help of daughter (19) because they were moving houses and the baby would have been ‘more expense’

An Ohio mother and her 19-year-old daughter are facing a slew of criminal charges after allegedly suffocating a newborn baby and throwing the child in the trunk of her car.

Basma Abdul Karim Alkelezli (36) gave birth on September 20 before she allegedly placed her baby in a garbage bag and called in her daughter Hanan Ahmad Al Jabouli (19) to hide the body.

She then placed the baby in an orange five-gallon bucket and hid it in her car, prosecutors allege. She admitted in court on Friday that she could hear the baby crying from inside the car.

The tragedy was discovered Sept. 20 when Norwich Township Fire Department paramedics responded to reports of a medical emergency, and later found Alkelezli had just given birth but was not cradling her child.

While Alkelezli was being rushed to the hospital, police visited the home and discovered a newborn baby in a car in the backyard, according to NBC4.

Both women face a slew of charges and have pleaded not guilty. Alkelezli’s bond was set at $2 million, and her daughter’s bond was set at $1 million.

Basma Abdul Karim Alkelezli, 36, gave birth on September 20 before allegedly suffocating the newborn and calling in her daughter to hide the body

Basma Abdul Karim Alkelezli, 36, gave birth on September 20 before allegedly suffocating the newborn and calling in her daughter to hide the body

Hanan Ahmad Al Jabouli, 19, is on trial with her mother on a slew of charges including aggravated murder, murder, strangulation or suffocation, child endangerment, abuse of a corpse and tampering with evidence.

Hanan Ahmad Al Jabouli, 19, is on trial with her mother on a slew of charges including aggravated murder, murder, strangulation or suffocation, child endangerment, abuse of a corpse and tampering with evidence.

Hanan Ahmad Al Jabouli, 19, is on trial with her mother on a slew of charges including aggravated murder, murder, strangulation or suffocation, child endangerment, abuse of a corpse and tampering with evidence.

Franklin County Assistant Prosecutor Cory Helffrich said Alkelezki eventually told officers she was pregnant, but admitted, “They were moving houses and the baby would have been more expense.”

Helffrich also claimed she told officers she wasn’t even looking at the baby and placed him in a trash bag seconds after giving birth.

When paramedics were first alerted to the medical emergency, a person – ostensibly her daughter – urged officers to rush to the home, but made no mention of her birth.

“My mom is not waking up, I don’t know what’s going on with her,” they told 911 in a call released by Hilliard police.

Reports indicate that emergency personnel found her actively bleeding but took her to the hospital without initially realizing she had given birth.

After it was determined by prosecutors that Al Jabouli helped her mother, Helffrich claimed she admitted to putting the child in a garbage bag and then the five-gallon bucket.

“(She) admitted she could still hear the baby crying from inside the garbage bag,” the prosecutor added.

It quickly became apparent that she did, including a recently cut umbilical cord, according to reports.

An officer also noted that there was a language barrier between her and the medics, which may have led to the delay in discovering that she had given birth.

Concerned medics alerted the police after it became clear the newborn was unaccounted for, with cops initially searching the home without success.

After moving to the back of the property and looking inside a vehicle parked in the back yard, they made the gruesome discovery of the child abandoned but still alive.

Officers quickly began to administer aid to the baby before taking him to Nationwide Children’s Hospital, where he was tragically pronounced dead.

A coroner determined the baby was born healthy before it was euthanized, according to Helffrich.

Paramedics rushed to the home after reports of a medical emergency, rushing Alkelezli to hospital before realizing she had given birth - but her baby was inexplicable

Paramedics rushed to the home after reports of a medical emergency, rushing Alkelezli to hospital before realizing she had given birth - but her baby was inexplicable

Paramedics rushed to the home after reports of a medical emergency, rushing Alkelezli to hospital before realizing she had given birth – but her baby was inexplicable

Neighbors said emergency responders administered CRP and chest compressions to the child to no avail, while a large police presence descended on the property.

Neighbors said emergency responders administered CRP and chest compressions to the child to no avail, while a large police presence descended on the property.

Neighbors said emergency responders administered CRP and chest compressions to the child to no avail, while a large police presence descended on the property.

The family members were indicted by a grand jury on Friday and now face a slew of gruesome charges related to the child’s death.

They are charged with aggravated murder, murder, strangulation or suffocation, child endangerment, abuse of a corpse and tampering with evidence. They pleaded not guilty during a court appearance in Ohio on Friday.

Prior to their arraignment this week, the mother and daughter were arrested on September 22 on charges of abuse of a corpse.

Hilliard Division Police Chief Mike Woods told reporters that officers were shocked by the alleged crime.

“All the officers that are here, most of them are parents, a few of them here have newborn children,” he said.

‘It is very difficult for them. I’m proud of them for pushing through it.’

A neighbor who saw paramedics trying to save the baby’s life told WSYX that a large police presence descended on the house and saw the child being carried away on a stretcher.

“They did compressions, you could tell by the way they handled the situation that it was a very small person,” they said.