Metro

Dead infants wrapped in paper found dumped on Bronx patio

The bodies of two dead newborn boys were found wrapped in brown paper and dumped in the back of a Bronx building on Monday afternoon, police said.

The building superintendent discovered the infant twins around 1:45 p.m. in a patio area behind the Claremont high-rise on College Avenue and East 171st Street, the NYPD said.

“It’s tragic,” a law enforcement source said. “These two boys never had a chance.”

One of the infants had a puncture wound that investigators believe may have occurred during birth, while the other had a head injury and a blue string wrapped around his neck, according to cops and sources.

Investigators believe the babies were thrown from a window inside the building, sources said.

Police didn’t have any information on who the children’s parents were Monday evening. Officers were canvassing the building for information and surveillance footage.

Resident Osvaldo Volquez, who called 911 to report the gruesome find, told The Post that the super alerted him after discovering the infants.

The 72-year-old said he saw one of the babies “curled up in the fetal position” and what looked like the placenta.

“I could see its little hands and feet,” said Volquez, who described the baby as a “fully formed” fetus who looked to be about 3 to 4 pounds.

He said the child was not moving and did not appear to be alive when he got there.

“It is a terrible act of humanity …,” Volquez said. “I don’t know who would do such a thing.”

Blood spatter was still visible Monday evening on the ground in the back patio area, which doesn’t appear to be accessible to non-residents.

Tytiana Lomax, 19, who lives in the building, said even residents can’t get into that area.

The teen said she was “shook,” adding that people in the roughly 40-unit building know each other, but she hadn’t noticed anyone pregnant recently.

NYPD Deputy Chief Timothy McCormack asked for the public’s help with the investigation during a press conference at the scene Monday evening.

Whoever left the infants could face charges of disposing of human remains, and possibly other raps depending on what the medical examiner finds for the cause of death, McCormack said.

Mohammed Oumarir, 70, the landlord of the building directly behind the one where the babies were found, said what happened to the infants was just “too much.”

“It shouldn’t be that way for nobody, even the animals,” he said.

A woman who lives nearby, Cassandra Bell, 52, was also shocked, calling the incident “f—ed up.”

“It’s f—ed up because they could have gave them kids to somebody that don’t have kids,” she said.

“This is the Bronx. But that shouldn’t have happened to them babies.”

Additional reporting by Lorena Mongelli and Craig McCarthy