LARGO, Fla. — Newly released audio and video files are providing some insight into the moments before and after the body of 2-year-old Jordan Belliveau was found.

In the recordings released Thursday, the boy's mother, Charisse Stinson, can be heard describing a man who she says took her son. She's then heard denying having anything to do with the boy's death.

Police then presented her with evidence that they say tie her to his murder.

Stinson has been charged in Jordan's death, accused of killing the boy and making up a kidnapping story to cover it up. Largo Police found Jordan’s body in a wooded area in September 2018, days after his mother reported him missing.

The video shows Stinson in the interrogation room on her knees, crying. This was hours after she told police that Jordan had been kidnapped. At one point, a detective apologizes for interrupting her praying.

In another video, she's seen meeting with a sketch artist, who asks her to describe the man who she says took her son.

“Can you briefly describe his hair, including the color?” the sketch artist says in the video.

 

"We found him, right where you left him, wearing the clothes, wearing the shoes. Your lies are over." - Detective to Charisse Stinson

 

 

Stinson replies, “I believe it was either brown or black and he had dreadlocks. Umm, they were kind of large. They were pretty fat.”

Stinson was describing in detail a man named Antwan who she says gave her and her son a ride, knocked her out, and took off with her 2-year-old, sparking an Amber Alert. She said the sketch they came up with was the kidnapper.

“If I seen him, if I seen him and then had this picture, I could, I could see that being him, if that makes sense,” Stinson said.

Days later, the tone of the police interviews changed — after a gruesome discovery of Jordan’s body in the woods.

While questioning Stinson, a detective tells her they had found her son’s body, and they wanted her to tell the truth.

“I saw him with my own eyes. I found him with my group of people. We found him, right where you left him, wearing the clothes, wearing the shoes. Your lies are over,” the detective says.

Investigators said they had doubts about Stinson's story from the beginning, and they let her know they had evidence indicating she was responsible for the boy's murder. 

“On King Park right here there’s a house, with a camera, and it sees you,” the detective says.

“Can you show me that? Because I’m not going to believe that. I’m not gonna believe that,” Stinson says.

The detective then shows Stinson another point on a map.

“This camera sees you walking south from this way where his body is found, carrying just a backpack now," he says.

"I’m gonna be sick," Stinson responds.

There is a lot of information that the State Attorney’s Office removed from that video, including a part that appears to be Stinson confessing to what she knows about what happened to Jordan that night.

We know from earlier reports she reportedly told detectives that she hit Jordan, he hit his head, and he had a seizure. She then reportedly panicked and dumped his body in a wooded area.