A seventh child survived.
In Tuesday's testimony before a Holmes County Circuit Court jury, firefighters said they never saw Williams carry any of seven children from the mobile home.
The jury also heard testimony from fire investigators that they believed flame from a candle triggered the blaze. They acknowledged under defense questioning, however, that they could not say for sure how it started.
Williams, 30, is charged with six counts of manslaughter in the deaths of six of the children authorities say were alone in the trailer when fire broke out during the early morning of Oct. 19, 2002.
District Attorney James Powell III of Durant contends Williams is solely responsible for the children's deaths, no matter what caused the fire, because she left them unattended in a mobile home without power or heat.
Prosecutors claim Williams left for a nightclub around 12:30 a.m. The fire, according to testimony, was noticed about an hour later.
Williams could face a 120-year prison sentence if convicted on all counts. Three of those who died were her children, and three were the children of her sister, Carolyn Williams. They ranged in age from 4 to 12.
Angela William's infant daughter, now 2, is in foster care.
The defense claims Williams not only rescued her child but also administered cardiopulmonary resuscitation on the infant until a firefighter finally took over.
Tchula police officer Clint Cobbins, also a county fire coordinator, told a different story.
Cobbins testified that firefighters carried all of the children from the house to an area where he was providing medical attention. Cobbins said it was then that he noticed Williams holding the baby.
``I happened to look up and there was life in this baby,'' he said.
Cobbins said he took the child from Williams and gave the infant CPR on the hood his patrol car until an ambulance arrived.
Cobbins said he was on patrol when he learned about the fire and was the first one on the scene shortly after 1:30 a.m. When he learned children were in the mobile home, he began to try to break out a window to get to them.
Cobbins said he first saw Williams as he tried to get inside the mobile home. Cobbins testified she cut her hand on the window and he called to firefighters to move Williams back from the mobile home.
Firefighter Alphonzo Greer, a cousin of the defendant, testified that before the fire he was making repairs to the mobile home for the landlord. Greer said he had given a key to the home to Williams because she had paid a deposit to owner Tony Mansoor and was planning to lease the trailer.
The defense pressed Greer about the possibility of having used any type of equipment in the trailer that might have created the fire. Greer said he had used all electrical equipment outdoors.
But Calvin Greer, the firefighter's brother, testified he might have seen a compressed air tank that requires electricity used inside the trailer.
Alphonzo Greer told he had hooked his equipment into an electrical outlet at a neighbor's house. The neighbor, Daniel Netters, testified Greer always removed all of his equipment, including extension cords, when he left the site.
Greer, Christlena Greer and Jessie Nicholson, another neighbor said they noticed candles burning inside the trailer the night of the fire. ``It was shining like a flickering light,'' Nicholson said.
Earlier, Defense Attorney Ed Blackmon had entered into evidence a pair of palm lights, which are battery-powered. Carl Rayfield, a state fire marshal, told the court he found a palm light in the debris of the fire but had not considered it significant.