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Entries in Infants (4)

Thursday
Sep042008

Father Rapes His Infant Daughter


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Reginald Davis, 18, of Forrest City, AR, has been accused of raping his 8-day-old baby daughter. Police also charged him with second-degree battery, because the baby also suffered a fractured skull in the attack, which occurred on Labor Day, Sept. 1, 2008. He was sent to St. Francis County Jail. At his first court appearance, the following Wednesday, the judge, citing the severity of the crime, raised his bail from $50,000 to $100,000.

According to police Davis was visiting with the 15-year-old mother of his daughter. The mother went into the bathroom to take a shower before going to bed. When she came out she found blood on her newborn baby. The girl and her family, accompanied by Davis, took the baby to Forrest City Medical Center where she was treated for rape and a fractured skull. The hospital also notified the police. It turned out that the little girl's injuries were so bad she was transferred to the Arkansas Children's Hospital in Little Rock. The police arrested Davis.

 



Investigators say that at the time of the attack, there were other people in the house. The case is still under investigation and it is unknown if any other arrests will be made. Reginald Davis, according to the police, has had no criminal record since turning 18. They could not comment on whether he had a juvenile record because that information could not be released under Arkansas state law.

Reginald Davis' mother said in a telephone interview that "he suffers from mental health issues." According to Dr. Allen Battle, a psychologist with the UT Medical group:

"Seeking a baby is extremely rare." He says "so many of the patience have been exposed to this behavior themselves. When they were kids in their formative stages."


According to the Children's Advocacy Center in Little Rock, Arkansas, recent reports of child sexual abuse is staggering:


  • 1 in 3 girls and 1 in 5 boys have been abused, with the average age being 3-years-old

  • 96% of the abusers are someone the child knows, loves and trusts

  • 75 cases were reported in 2000, 471 cases were reported in 2007



Davis is being held on a $100,000 bond and is scheduled to appear in circuit court on September 17.

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Thursday
Dec202007

Are You My Mother??!!


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Giving up a child for adoption is never an easy decision. There may be many factors involved in making such a difficult and heart-wrenching choice. However once taken, there is a certain finality to it. The life you brought into this world will be nurtured, cared for, raised and molded by someone else. You will never know the joy and stress of watching and participating in the development of a human being. There will be no first words, no first steps and no first day of school. There will also be no diaper changing, no late night feedings and no runny noses. There will also be no bonding, no caring and no loving. Your birth child will be lost to you forever. It is not an easy decision to give away a child.
The U.S. Census Bureau (year 2000) estimates that more 2 million (2.5% of the child population) children lived with adoptive parents. More than 4 million (5.2%) had one step-parent.

Most adopted children never find their birth mother. Adoption professionals are often wary of reunions. They say happy reunions can be rare. Biological parents often don’t want to revisit memories of an unplanned pregnancy. Adoptees often fear they will learn they share the genes of criminals or substance abusers. However many adopted children are curious about their real parents.

Below are two stories of children who did find their real parents. What makes these stories unique is the fact that they had already met their mothers and did not know it.

The Steve Flaig Story.


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In 1985, 23-year-old Christine Tallady was single and pregnant. Her son was born on Oct. 5. It was a tough decision for Christine to give up her first child for adoption but she said "I wasn't ready to be a mother." She left the adoption record open, hoping that some day her son would try to find her. She often thought about him - especially on his birthday - but eventually she got married and had two more children.

Her son, now named Steve, was adopted by Pat and Lois Flaig. Steve always knew that he was adopted. When he turned 18, he went to the adoption agency D.A. Blodgett for Children and asked for the information on his background. The information he received contained his birth mother's name. He searched for her, for 4 years, using the internet to try to find her address and came up with nothing.

Around the time of his 22nd birthday he took another look at the paperwork form the adoption agency and realized that he had been spelling her last name incorrectly. Her name was "Tallady" and he had been searching for "Talladay". He began his search again, this time with the correct spelling and came up with an address less than a mile away from the Lowe's store at which he worked. He made some inquires and found out that she had just been hired at the same Lowe's store a few month's ago. They knew each other! But he didn't know how to proceed.
It would seem tactless to walk up and say, "Hi, I'm Steve, your son." What if she rejected him?

Eventually he decided to tell the adoption agency that he had found his mother and that she worked with him. An employee volunteered to call Tallady and after receiving the call Tallady recalled:
"It was a shock. I started crying. I figured he would call me sometime, but not like this."

She sobbed a lot that day, tears of joy. Flaig called her later that day, and the two, who until then had occasionally said "hi" as co-workers do, met at the Cheers Good Time Saloon near the store. They hugged, sat and talked for 2 ½ hours..........

The Michelle Wetzell story.


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Michelle Wetzell who was adopted when she was 4 days old, wanted to somehow learn her mother’s name and address and mail her a coupon for a free manicure. She wanted to see her mother and learn a little about her, without the threat of awkwardness or rejection.

That was 10 years ago. The memory gives Wetzell chills because of what she learned. She found out her mother had been a co-worker at the Davenport salon, working at the receptionist’s desk, just out of earshot of the stylists and manicurists. Her mother was someone she knew and admired.
“There she was, the whole time,” Wetzell said.

Cathy Henzen, Michelle's mother, found out she was pregnant in 1975 at a time when she was getting a divorce and already had two young daughters. She was living in East Moline and still sharing an apartment with her husband because they couldn’t afford separate homes. Henzen remembers the time around the divorce as the lowest point in her life. She and her husband had heated arguments almost every day. She feared her daughters were being harmed by seeing and listening to the fighting.
“I couldn’t risk bringing another child into this family,” Henzen said.

She decided to place her child for adoption with a nonprofit agency, Bethany for Children and Families. On Feb. 23, 1976, medical staff took the newborn girl away five minutes after she was born. “It was almost as if they snatched her out of my arms,” Henzen remembers. She wonders if she would have backed out of the adoption if she had been given more time to hold the baby.

Michelle Wetzell was adopted by a couple from Prophetstown, Ill., about 45 miles away. She was told that she was adopted even before she understood what it meant. After graduating from high school, Wetzell moved to Davenport and attended Capri College, a cosmetology school. She got a job doing manicures at Hair By Stewarts. At the salon, she was one of about a dozen young women who did hair and nails. Henzen worked out front, greeting customers and scheduling appointments. Wetzell remembers Henzen as the glue that held the business together with her bubbly personality and her ability to stay cool during busy times.

In the 10 years since leaving the salon, Wetzell moved back to Prophetstown, got married and has a 2-year-old daughter. She works part-time jobs as a bartender at a country club and as a manicurist. Henzen, who is single, left the salon in 1998 and now works as a receptionist for a trucking company.

The two women were reunited because of a medical test that Wetzell had to take to get a life insurance policy. She found out her cholesterol was unusually high for someone her age. The doctor told her that she needed to look into whether her family has any history of heart disease or other illnesses that can be passed on to children.

Wetzell went to Bethany to see if the agency could tell her anything. The agency agreed to help her contact her biological parents. They found Henzen and she agreed to give her medical history and contact information. A case worker at Bethany noticed that Wetzell and Henzen had both worked in cosmetology and mentioned this to Wetzell. This led Wetzell to ask the case worker for more details about Henzen’s job experience. After a few minutes, it clicked. The case worker then called Henzen to tell her the news that her daughter was a former co-worker.

Wetzell and Henzen spoke on the phone later that day. They met a week later at a restaurant, accompanied by Wetzell’s adoptive mother and sister. “Where does it go from here? I just think that we take it a day at a time,” Henzen said.

Henzen said she feels validated that she made the right decision 30 years ago because she can see that Wetzell turned out to be the kind of person anybody would want as a daughter or a friend.
“In my heart I believe I did make the right decision,” Henzen said.

 


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Friday
Oct122007

Babies Swapped at Birth


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This sort of thing is not supposed to happen. Jaroslava Trojanova and Jaroslava Cermakova, both 25, gave birth in the southern Czech town of Trebic last December. However due to a mix-up at the hospital, the babies were given to the wrong mothers. The mistake arose when nurses failed to write the children's surnames on their leg bracelets. The two women left the hospital believing that they each had their own biological child. It would be 10 months before the mistake was discovered.

At the hospital there were warning signs that all was not right. Jaroslava Trojanova and Jaroslava Cermakova, gave birth just 18 minutes apart, both had baby girls. Both sets of parents were puzzled when their baby's weight seemed to change overnight. The next day Trojanova's baby whom she named Nikola, weighed less than 6lbs, compared with a birth weight of more than 7lbs. Cermakova's child, Veronika, appeared to have put on 1.65lb overnight. The hospital staff reassured both sets of parents the birth weights must have been recorded wrongly.

The blunder only came to light when Miss Trojanova's partner Libor Broza was stung by workmates' jibes that blonde baby Nikola looked nothing like the couple, who are both dark. He decided to have a DNA test done secretly and discovered that he was not the baby's father. Libor confronted his girlfriend with the DNA results and accused her of cheating on him. She insisted that he was indeed the father and had her own DNA test done. The result shocked both of them. She was not the baby's mother.

Two weeks later, they discovered their real daughter, Veronika, was living with Mrs Cermakova and her husband Jan in a village 20 miles away. Both couples now plan to sue Trebic Hospital in Brno in the Czech Republic. The hospital has declined to comment publicly but its director Petr Mayer this week delivered a written apology to the couples.
Lorry driver Libor said: "It was a total shock. I just cried for two hours solid and Jaroslava was inconsolable. We have raised Nikola for the past 10 months. She's a beautiful little girl who's always smiling and it's impossible to imagine her now living apart from us. But at the same time just 20 miles away lives our real daughter."

He added: "We have missed so many milestones in Veronika's life - her first teeth and her first steps. Now we are determined not to miss her first birthday and her first Christmas."

[youtube=http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Luh3Q3qUIBc]
The two mums given the wrong babies, are saying painful goodbyes to the little girls they have loved for 10 months. Babies Nikola and Veronika will be reunited full-time with their biological mums just before Christmas. Mums Jaroslava Trojanova and Jaroslava Cermakova, met last week to plan the swap. They agreed to gradually spend more and more time together before the final handover.........that was the plan, anyway. Now things have changed.

The two women, who have cared for the girls for ten months, said they could not go through with the exchange agreed to earlier.
Miss Trojanova was adamant she could not give up her non-biological baby. "I cannot even begin to imagine a life without Nikola," said the factory worker. "How can I now see her as someone else's child and not my own?"

Mrs Cermakova, who is pregnant again, also insisted she would not hand over the girl she was given. "I have loved my daughter for almost a year now," she said. "This time cannot be erased from my heart. But I will learn to love my other, biological daughter too."

Disagreeing with his partner, Mr Broza, 29, insisted he wanted to take home his real daughter Veronika.
"We are facing a horrible dilemma and the mothers are suffering the most," he said. "But we will eventually need to swop our babies back. I would like to have my own daughter, although my love for Nikola will never diminish."

Mr Cermakova, who is out of work, said:
"We are completely clueless as how to go about this, it is such a horrible situation. But we agree on one thing: our daughters will have four parents. We will raise them together as one big family. We are bonded together for ever by this terrible fate of ours. My wife and I, we say that we will have two daughters from now on. It would be impossible to simply give up on our baby, even if we are not the biological parents."

The Cermakovas live in Trebic, 30 minutes' drive from Jablonov, the home village of Mr Broza and Miss Trojanova. Mr Cermakova, 26, said the families-were considering whether they could settle in the same place. The county court in Zdar Nad Sazavou ruled yesterday that the birth certificates would not be changed and that the couples should simply swop babies. That means that Nikola will legally assume Veronika's identity and vice versa.

TO BE CONTINUED.......

 


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Monday
Jul022007

Babies Learn Deception Early


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When a baby cries is it because of hunger, wetness, tiredness, illness or for no other reason than just to get your attention? Can you tell the difference? Experts now believe that even though babies communicate non-verbally, they are just as capable, as a young child is, of deception. Until now, psychologists had thought the developing brains were not capable of the difficult art of lying until four years old. It is now believed that lying can start as young as six months old.

Dr Vasudevi Reddy, of the University of Portsmouth's psychology department, says she has identified seven categories of deception used between six months and three-years-old.
"Fake crying is one of the earliest forms of deception to emerge, and infants use it to get attention even though nothing is wrong. You can tell, as they will then pause while they wait to hear if their mother is responding, before crying again.

Aside from fake crying Dr Vasudevi Reddy identifies other activities such as:

  • pretend laughing

  • concealing forbidden activities

  • distracting parents' attention

  • bluffing when threatened with a punishment


Dr Reddy thinks children use early fibs to discover what kinds of lie work in certain situations, and also learn the negative consequences of lying too much. Apparently there is no morality involved in their actions, in other words young children don't distinguish between right and wrong; deception is merely a mechanism to discover what works when they want a desired result.

 


 


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