A woman wanted for kidnapping her 11-month-old son reportedly told authorities she doesnât know why she shot and killed the boy, but that in her mind, she couldnât let her ex or his family have him.
âEven if the rest of life is worthless she would do it again just so to make sure that the (family) didnât touch him,â Detective Lt. Jason Jordan of the Grant County Sheriffâs Office in New Mexico wrote in an affidavit of probable cause filed in the case and made available Friday.
Madeline Daly, 35, shot the boy Tuesday when she realized law enforcement was closing in on her, then tried to turn a gun on herself, but by then officers were able to subdue her, according to the affidavit.
Before then, she was staying in an RV park in Ten Sleep, Wyoming, and was last seen with her son in Worland last month.
Daly told investigators that after officers stormed into the RV when she shot the boy, she âwasnât fast enough killing herself after is all she can say about that,â the affidavit says.
Daly was wanted on a warrant out of Washakie County, Wyoming, after the boyâs father reported the infant missing Nov. 19.
The father, Jake Stoner of Kilgore, Nebraska, shared custody of the boy, named Basil, with Daly and said she resisted him visiting their son. He last saw Basil on Sept. 28.
Madeline Daly had disappeared until this week after she applied for a job near the town of Silver City, New Mexico, the affidavit says.
The Wyoming warrant for her arrest popped up during a background check, the affidavit says.
âMadeline was ran during a background check from the owner of (a local business),â Jordan wrote.
The owner âwas going to hire Madeline, but before making that decision did some investigating of his own and saw that Madeline was currently wanted in Washakie County, Wyoming, for kidnapping.â
The owner of the business called Washakie County, which then reported her to the local authorities in New Mexico, according to the affidavit.

âRunning From Somethingâ
For her part, Daly told agents after her arrest that she was keeping Basil âsafe,â and that she knew she was breaking the law, but felt it was worth it for the sake of her child.
She said thatâs why she ran into a nearby RV with Basil when she realized the law was closing in on her, the affidavit says.
She also made unsubstantiated claims that Basil âwould have been in danger and molested if she would have stepped out of that trailerâ and that his father ânever wanted anything to do with Basil, financially, physically, emotionally ever.â
When questioned about why she kidnapped her own son, Daly replied that âshe was not going to allow her (then) 8-month-old baby go back and forth from Nebraska to Wyoming twice a month,â the affidavit says.
Daly said she wound up in New Mexico because she had worked in that area 10 years ago. She began working for some people there who âended up ratting her out because they knew she was running from something,â Jordan wrote.
âA Bit Evasiveâ
Daly apparently had been trying to blend into an unincorporated area near Silver City, Jordan writes in his affidavit.
She was living in a rented bunkhouse, and an officer who had a contact living near the bunkhouse was alerted and began âkeeping an eye out for her return home,â Jordan wrote.
Coincidentally, another deputy saw Madeline Daly and her son earlier that day at a local restaurant, but at the time didnât know she was wanted by the law.
âMadeline was last seen this morning by Cpl. Deputy (William) Mize at the Three Questions CafĂ© in Mimbres, but he was not aware of the kidnapping at the time,â the affidavit says.
The document goes on to recount that the deputy observed that âshe was a bit evasive as she sat down with her son to have breakfast this morning.â
âI Knew My Time Was Upâ
After getting the call from Washakie County, the Grant County Sheriffâs Office developed a plan to retrieve Basil, the affidavit says.
That included sending out five deputies to the bunkhouse. They had been tipped off that Madeline Daly had returned there.
âOn arrival, Cpl. Deputy Mize saw a female subject running with a small child towards a motorized RV,â the affidavit says. âWhen deputies arrive to the motorized RV, they were confronted by a female subject later identified as (the owner of the RV).â
Daly later told investigators why she ran with Basil into the RV.
âI saw the sheriffs and I knew my time was up,â she said, according to the affidavit.
âWhen asked what went through her mind when she saw law enforcement walking up, she replied, âJake canât get Basil,ââ the affidavit said.
Daly reportedly told investigators she assumed they had a felony warrant for kidnapping because she didnât follow a judgeâs custody order.
âSo she said, âF*** it, itâs worth a shot,ââ the affidavit says, adding that she considered her actions âworth itâ if it meant keeping Basil away from his father and his family.
Deputies wanted to go into the RV and get the boy, but the owner âwould not give deputies permission to enter her residence without a search warrant,â the affidavit says.

Too Late
While authorities were telling Daly that she was surrounded and calling her out of the house, other agents were preparing to get a search warrant âjust in case Madeline did not comply and come outside,â the affidavit says.
It was then at least one gunshot was heard from inside the RV.
âWhile working on the search warrant, I did have my handheld radio on and heard deputies yell for assistance from EMS,â Jordan wrote.
One deputy then reported that the 11-month-old had been âshot in the chest by his mother, Madeline Daly,â the affidavit says, adding that she was in custody.
Itâs not clear from the affidavit how many times the infant was shot.
The document references a gunshot to the chest, but then also reports that âmedical staff worked on the child, but they were unable to save his life due to the gunshot wound to the face.â
Asked later by investigators why she killed Basil, Daly âcould not think of why or when she decided to shoot her son, and (she was) not sure she should even be saying anything without a lawyer, not that (a lawyer) would help.â
Tragic Ending To Search
The tragic ending to the search for his son has left Stoner devastated, his attorney Christopher King told Cowboy State Daily on Wednesday.
King said Stoner had sat by the phone for months waiting for word that his son was safe and heâd be able to celebrate Christmas with him.
Dalyâs first-degree murder charge is a capital offense and has been turned over to the local office of the FBI and the U.S. Attorneyâs Office for New Mexico.
The FBI public affairs office told Cowboy State Daily in a Friday email that it canât provide any details on the case, and that âany and allâ potential federal charges will come from the U.S. Attorneyâs Office.
Daly remains in the Grant County Detention Center on suspicion of first-degree murder and abandonment of a child resulting in death. Sheâs being held without bond.
Greg Johnson can be reached at greg@cowboystatedaily.com.





