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View Full Version : New Mexico teen mom throws newborn in dumpster in shocking video



Teh One Who Knocks
01-11-2022, 11:19 AM
By Michael Ruiz | Fox News


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Surveillance video taken outside a New Mexico store shows the moments a teen mom tossed her unwanted newborn into a dumpster – and the rescuers who pulled her to safety five hours later.

"I got a call about 8:30 on Friday, and Hobbs PD said, ‘Hey Joe are your cameras working out back?’" Joe Imbriale, the owner of Rig Outfitters, told Fox News Digital. "They said we have a crime scene."

At first, he thought someone had broken into the store. But the video showed a woman pulling up in a white car around 2 p.m. MT Friday, unceremoniously tossing a black bag from the backseat into the dumpster and driving off.

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Close to six hours later, the cameras show a group of people fishing through the dumpster and pulling the baby out. They had heard the baby crying inside, Imbriale said.

Acting Hobbs Police Chief August Fons said during a news briefing Monday afternoon that the three people were scavenging in the dumpsters "for anything of value" when they heard whimpering inside. They dug closer and eventually found the male newborn inside a trash bag.

They picked him out, wrapped in a "dirty, wet towel" covered in dried blood and with his umbilical cord still attached, the chief said.

Police identified the good Samaritans as Michael Green, Hector Jasso and April Nuttall.

Jasso told police that they first thought the crying might have been a kitten, but as soon as he picked up the bag, he could tell it was too heavy.

Nuttall fished the child out of the bag and immediately cradled him in the towel, according to video of the incident and the police report. Green called 911.

"Their collective quick response to this emergency, including notification of 911, was absolutely pivotal in saving this baby’s life," Fons said.

Police arrived within minutes.

A short while later, investigators called Imbriale and asked if they could review his surveillance cameras, he told Fox News Digital Monday.

"They said we’re looking for somebody that dumped a black garbage bag in your dumpster, and I knew right then, I turned to the office and said, ‘Please don’t tell me it’s a baby,’" he said.

The room got emotional, he said, but one of the officers interjected: "The baby’s still alive. Don’t worry."

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After reviewing the video, Hobbs police charged the mother, 18-year-old Alexis Avila, with attempted murder and child abuse. They said she confessed to investigators. Fons said investigators would not release the suspected father's identity because he is a juvenile.

He said Avila told investigators that she did not know she was pregnant until last week when she sought treatment for abdominal pain. She also told police she ended her relationship with the suspected father back in August.

Avila's mother, Martha Avila, told detectives that she'd banned the ex-boyfriend from their home in June after he allegedly "battered" her daughter.

Avila told police she gave birth to the boy in her parents' bathroom and panicked. She allegedly stuffed the baby inside two plastic bags, one with other trash, and left it in the dumpster.

Temperatures that night hovered around 36 degrees, according to police, and the "wind was blowing moderately."

During her interview with investigators, police said "Alexis referred to the baby as ‘it’ at all times." When detectives asked what she thought would happen to a baby left in a plastic bag, she didn't answer, according to the criminal complaint, obtained by Fox News Digital.

An ambulance brought the baby to a nearby hospital. The child later traveled by helicopter to another one in Lubbock, Texas, where he is in stable condition. Fons declined to release additional details about the child.

Fifth Judicial District prosecutors said the charges could be amended once Avila is arraigned.

All 50 states have "safe haven" laws that allow newborn children to be surrendered safely to a designated location, according to the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services.

DemonGeminiX
01-11-2022, 11:36 AM
Jesus. :|

lost in melb.
01-11-2022, 12:55 PM
I hope and pray that this little baby finds a loving family.

I hope the mother one day repents for her sin.

PorkChopSandwiches
01-11-2022, 04:40 PM
In CA you can drop your kid off at any fire station no questions asked, you dont have to throw it away

Teh One Who Knocks
01-11-2022, 05:29 PM
In CA you can drop your kid off at any fire station no questions asked, you dont have to throw it away

So do all states:


All 50 states have "safe haven" laws that allow newborn children to be surrendered safely to a designated location, according to the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services.

Muddy
01-11-2022, 06:47 PM
So do all states:

Maybe the problem is not everyone knows this...?

deebakes
01-12-2022, 02:56 AM
maybe she's a horrible fucking goblin woman that doesn't care either way

lost in melb.
01-12-2022, 06:21 AM
Yeah. Probably...but it could have been worse.

That's a nice car for a desperate woman.

Teh One Who Knocks
01-12-2022, 03:21 PM
By Michael Ruiz | Fox News


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As New Mexico authorities are accepting non-monetary donations on behalf of a baby boy abandoned in a dumpster in the city of Hobbs and for other children under state care, the mother of the woman accused of abandoning him is telling reporters, "Everybody makes mistakes."

Alexis Avila, 18, has been charged with attempted murder and child abuse in connection with the incident, according to city police. She allegedly wrapped the baby in a blood-soaked towel and two garbage bags, then abandoned him in 36-degree weather with his umbilical cord still attached.

A woman who picked up the phone at a number listed for her mother, Martha Avila, said it was the wrong number Tuesday.

But the elder Avila defended her daughter to a Daily Mail reporter outside her home in the city of Hobbs.

"People can preach all they want, they can judge all they want, but we only care about the judgment of one," she told the outlet.

She also doubled down on the claim that her daughter didn't know she was pregnant, which police said the young woman told investigators when they brought her in for questioning, and she allegedly admitted to the crime. During that same interview, police said she only referred to the child as "it."

As for the baby boy, a group of good Samaritans stumbled across him and rescued him from the dumpster. He is in stable condition at a hospital in Lubbock, Texas, and in the "lawful custody" of the New Mexico Children, Youth and Families Department (NMCYFD), according to Hobbs Acting Police Chief August Fons. He said he could not release additional details Monday due to confidentiality concerns.

The child’s father is believed to be a teen from Hobbs, whose identity police did not release because he is under 18.

Martha Avila told Hobbs police that she had banned her daughter's ex from visiting their house because he allegedly "battered" her daughter in June, according to a criminal complaint.

"Even if she doesn't want custody, she should be caring enough about her grandbaby to be saying, ‘No, he’s an abusive boyfriend, and I don't want him to have custody," said Joe Imbriale, a local store owner whose surveillance cameras captured the incident and drew national attention Monday.

An NMCYFD spokesperson said she could not comment on individual cases due to state privacy rules.

Imbriale also questioned the Avilas' timeline of events, which included a Jan. 4 doctor visit for prescription pain meds, according to court documents.

"If they did that, wouldn't they have done a pregnancy test on a girl that young?" he asked. "There's a lot of holes in her story."

Imbriale's surveillance video shows a woman tossing a garbage bag into a dumpster and a group of people finding a baby inside almost six hours later.

"She's trying to defend her daughter, why doesn't she stop shouting her mouth off and take ownership of how she raised her daughter," Imbriale told Fox News Digital Tuesday. "Stop trying to protect her now. You screwed up, you raised a terrible daughter."

The video showed a woman, alleged to be Avila, pulling up in a white car around 2 p.m. MT Friday, tossing her newborn baby boy from the backseat into the dumpster and driving off.

Around 7:45 p.m., Michael Green, Hector Jasso and April Nuttall arrived to scavenge anything of value from the dumpsters. But they heard cries coming from inside a bag and fished it out.

The video shows that Nuttall picked the infant out of the garbage bag and cradled him in her arms as Green called 911.

In a call center recording, Green told the dispatcher, "We just found a baby in the trash."

He was alive, he added. And he was breathing.

"Their collective quick response to this emergency, including notification of 911, was absolutely pivotal in saving this baby’s life," Fons said.

The state’s Children, Youth and Families Department says donations for the baby boy of gift cards, toys, clothes or other items can be sent to 907 West Calle Sur in Hobbs, New Mexico.

"We are always looking for homes for children and youth that are in foster care and just very grateful for the outpouring from the community of wanting to help in any way," Emily Martin, the head of NMCYFD's Protective Services Division, told Fox News Digital Tuesday.

More information about becoming a foster parent can be found on the agency's website or by calling 1-800-432-2075, she said.

Inquiries about donations to other children under the state's care can be made by email. The NMCYFD does not accept money or used items.

All 50 states have "safe haven" laws that allow newborns to be dropped off without criminal penalties at designated locations.

"If you’re struggling with a new infant, and you’re unable to take care of that baby, the best response is to find somebody that can help you at a designated safe haven," Fons said Monday.

Those include fire and police departments.

Avila's arraignment is scheduled for 2:15 p.m. ET Wednesday.

PorkChopSandwiches
01-12-2022, 04:24 PM
just a mistake

deebakes
01-13-2022, 02:02 AM
guilty

lost in melb.
01-13-2022, 03:59 AM
I don't know what to say