Amanda Catherine Hein
© Amanda Catherine Hein via FacebookAmanda Catherine Hein has been accused of killing her newborn son โ€” and she could face the death penalty if she is guilty as charged.
Amanda Catherine Hein, 26, of Allentown, allegedly delivered the healthy baby boy at Starters Pub and then continued watching a pay-per-view wrestling match with three male friends.

A Pennsylvania woman gave birth in the bathroom of a sports bar, smothered the baby boy in a trash bag and then left him to die in a toilet tank - a crime punishable by death.

Amanda Hein, 26, of Allentown, has been ordered held without bail. She was charged with criminal homicide. In Pennsylvania, the intentional murder of a child under 12 is a capital offense.

The baby boy was alive and healthy - carried from 33 to 36 weeks - when Hein delivered him at Starters Pub in Bethlehem, Pa., on Aug. 18, the coroner said.

Hein was watching wrestling on television with a group of friends when her back began hurting, District Attorney John Morganelli said. She went to the bathroom for what seemed like a long time and returned to the table. One of her pals, Luis Rivera, told police that when Hein came back to the table, she grabbed her purse and then went outside to smoke.

Only after she and her friends left the pub did workers make the horrifying discovery in the women's bathroom.

Starter's bathroom
© WPVIScreengrabs of the bathroom at Starters Pub where Amanda Catherine Hein, 26, allegedly suffocated her newborn son and hid him in a toilet tank.
Bar owner Dave Rank was in a state of shock.

"One of my guys was trying to flush toilets to clean the inside. They were having problems so he lifted the tank up and inside the tank was a fetus," Rank told The Morning Call.

Rank was looking for answers. "I've been on the phone with the police, and I've been on the phone with my church," he said while holding back tears. "I mean, this is a devastating thing."

Police believe Hein realized she was pregnant in either May or June but didn't tell anyone.

When she left her friends in the bar, she disappeared into the bathroom for about 40 minutes and ignored their texts asking her if she was okay. She eventually returned stained in blood, which she asked everyone to ignore. They did.

The group remained for another hour watching the pay-per-view wrestling match before Rivera drove her home, according to police. He told cops he asked Hein if she needed to go to a hospital, but she told him she didn't have insurance and asked to be dropped off at her house.

When workers found the baby, they say they had no trouble linking it back to Hein because large amounts of blood had been discovered on the booth reserved to Rivera. Hein was the only female in Rivera's party.

Hein's grandmother, who lives with the young woman, was stunned.

"She can't believe it," neighbor Victor Rosado told NBC Philadelphia. "I didn't know she was pregnant. She didn't look pregnant."

Police are searching for the father of the child.

Hein is due back in court Sept. 5.

"Whether it was 1 hour or 10 minutes old or 1 year old, it is a person, and this person's life was taken," Morganelli told reporters, adding that he had no idea what led her to allegedly commit the crime.

Pennsylvania, like 48 other states, has a "safe haven law" that allows parents to turn over unwanted babies to hospitals without criminal prosecution.