truesee's Blog

NY parents accused of taking children on burglary

NY parents accused taking children on burglary
Wednesday, April 22 07:05 pm


A mother was accused on Wednesday of driving a getaway minivan with her two young children inside after burglaries at two New York City homes.

Prosecutors said Erika Santana, 23, drove the van with her four-year-old and five-month-old children inside after Hugo Lantigua, 22, who is the baby's father, and Pedro Camillo, 19, broke into two houses in the borough of Queens.

Santana, Lantigua and Camillo face charges including burglary, criminal possession of a weapon and endangering the welfare of a child, and face up to 25 years in prison.

"It is unthinkable that a mother and father would put their children in harm's way while allegedly committing these crimes. It is even more unimaginable that they would allegedly do so with a loaded handgun in their vehicle," Queens District Attorney Richard Brown said.

(Reporting by Michelle Nichols; Editing by David Storey)

Entry #382

Prison tryst interrupted

Prison tryst interrupted


Karen Voyles
Gainesville Sun 
Staff Writer

Published: Thursday, April 23, 2009 at 6:01 a.m.
Last Modified: Wednesday, April 22, 2009 at 10:43 p.m.

A Gainesville woman accused of sneaking into a minimum-security prison for a rendezvous with her boyfriend early Wednesday was arrested when the couple were discovered.

The boyfriend reportedly jumped out of a window and remained a fugitive at midday Wednesday.

Gainesville police arrested Victoria Thorp, 19, inside a dormitory at the Santa Fe Work Release Center on NW 39th Avenue shortly after 3 a.m.

Police Lt. Wayne Ash said the woman Thorp had apparently climbed through an unbarred window to see Aquilla Wilson, 18. Wilson was serving time at the minimum-security state facility for Citrus County drug convictions.

"It appeared that she climbed through the window for a little tryst, and when they got caught, he left and left her there," Ash said.

Thorp was being held at the Alachua County jail on charges of aiding a prisoner's escape and introduction of contraband into a prison. A search for Wilson - who was considered a fugitive as soon as he went through the window - was under way.

 

Aquila Wilson

 

 

 Victoria Thorp

Entry #381

Boys, 10 and 11 arrested for selling pot at school

indystar.com

April 23, 2009

Police: Warren Township boys, 10 and 11, dealt pot at school

Vic Ryckaert and Robert Annis

Two Warren Township fifth-graders -- ages 10 and 11 -- have been arrested after police say they were caught conducting a marijuana deal at school.

Details were sketchy, but Warren Township spokesman Dennis Jarrett said a student told school officials he saw a classmate at Brookview Elementary sell a "marijuana-like substance" to another student Tuesday morning.

"We are getting to a state of emergency," said the Rev. Byron Alston, director of Save the Youth, an Eastside social services program. "When you have elementary students selling dope in the school, we've got a serious problem."

According to a police report, an Indianapolis Metropolitan Police Department field technician later confirmed the substance was 1.88 grams of marijuana -- enough for one or two joints.

The boys were arrested on juvenile charges of dealing and possessing marijuana and taken to the Marion County Juvenile Detention Center. Both were suspended, pending an investigation.

Their ages raised concern.

"It's kind of shocking that it would happen at an elementary school, especially this one," said parent Doug Stephenson, 41, Indianapolis. "Brookview has always been a well-disciplined, well-managed school, with strict policies on dress and behavior. This is the first time we've ever heard of a problem like this."

Indiana University studies on drug, alcohol and tobacco use start with Grade 6. Most state and national studies on youth drug use do not include kids younger than 12.

In 2008, IU's Indiana Prevention Resource Center found that overall drug use among the state's students had dropped, and that the average age for first trying marijuana was 13.8 years.

Randy Miller, director of Drug-Free Marion County, said it is rare for children this young to be involved in selling marijuana.

"It certainly brings into question what they've been exposed to along the way," Miller said. "You're certainly not going to find 10- and 11-year-olds saying this is a way to make money."

Alston wondered where the boys got the drug. Police and school officials did not answer that question Wednesday.

"They had to get it from somebody they know, and somebody had to teach them how to do it," Alston said.

Messages left at the two students' homes were not returned Wednesday evening.

Class time at Brookview, 1550 Cumberland Road, wasn't affected, Jarrett said, but Principal Timothy Hanson spoke to students afterward.

"The principal took the opportunity to talk to the other students about the importance of making good choices, and that bad decisions wouldn't be tolerated at Brookview Elementary," Jarrett said. "It's a shame that it happened, but it does show that one kid did the right thing. It shows (anti-drug) education is working."

Brookview, which serves students in Grades K-5, has 473 students enrolled this year, according the state Department of Education.

Hanson and Warren Township Schools Superintendent Peggy Hinckley didn't return phone calls seeking comment Wednesday afternoon.

Stephenson, the Brookview parent, applauded school officials for notifying police right away. But he said a message left on his answering machine by the school was exceedingly vague and didn't say why police were at the school.

Rob Garl, treasurer of Brookview's parent-teacher association, said officials gave general information.

"We were simply told that it was inappropriate for school and inappropriate for society or something to that effect," he said.


 

Entry #380

Parishioners' sue new senior minister over $600,000 salary

Head of Riverside Church defends Rev. Brad Braxton's $600K annual compensation

Thursday, April 23rd 2009, 4:00 AM

The head of the Riverside Church Council is defending a more than $600,000-a-year package for the church's new senior minister - a setup that has sparked a court fight among members of the congregation

The Rev. Brad Braxton's pay is "in line with compensation packages of other religious leaders in Manhattan who minister to congregations of a similar size and scope," the council chairman, Billy Jones, said in a statement released through public relations guru Howard Rubenstein.

As the Daily News revealed Wednesday, Braxton's lavish package includes a $250,000 annual salary, a monthly "living allowance" of $11,500, plus separate allowances for a maid, entertainment, travel and professional development expenses. There's even an annual payment into a fund for Braxton to save money to buy a home.

Church leaders resisted disclosure of the contract's specifics in a hearing in Manhattan Supreme Court this week. Church sources say it amounts to double what the Rev. James Forbes, Braxton's predecessor, received in the final years of his 18-year tenure.

Thanks to the "living allowance," Braxton, a 40-year-old former professor at Vanderbilt University Divinity School, his wife and young daughter have moved into a penthouse apartment at the Montana, a luxury high-rise on the upper West Side where apartments rent for up to $18,000 a month.

A Riverside spokesman declined a request for an interview with Braxton. A woman who answered the door to the couple's apartment also declined to talk.

Jones said Braxton's employment contract "was presented to the congregation on three separate occasions and was voted on, and approved by the congregation in our budget meeting."

Several church members dispute that claim.

"If what they say is true, why would we still be asking to see the compensation package?" said Virl Andrick, who sits on the church budget committee and is a 25-year member of the congregation.

He is among a group that went to court to try to block Braxton's installation, scheduled for Sunday.

The dissidents say they never got details of what their new pastor would cost when they voted to hire him. They've asked for a full meeting of the congregation May 3 to question Braxton and church leaders about thecontract.

They are worried the huge endowment the socially liberal Morningside Heights church received from John D. Rockefeller Jr. decades ago shriveled in the stock market collapse to barely more than $100 million.

At the same time, the church is running a huge operating deficit each year, but can draw no more 5% from the endowment to cover shortfalls.

"That means the operating budget over the next three years will have to be catastrophically reduced," said Richard Stone, a former church leader and lawyer for the Braxton opponents.

There is no excuse for shelling out so much money for one minister in the midst of an economic meltdown for both the country and their own church, they say.

Jones and church leaders see things differently. They point to Braxton's "breadth of responsibilities." In addition to meeting the spiritual needs of the congregation, his duties include "overseeing a staff of 150 people ... overseeing a full-time day school of 128 students and running 80 church and community programs," Jones said.

Manhattan Supreme Court Justice Lewis Bart Stone has urged the two sides to reconcile their differences.

 

 

PREVIOUS ARTICLE----

Reverend Brad Braxton. 

Reverend Brad Braxton 

 

 

 

 

New Riverside Church pastor Rev. Brad Braxton's $600K compensation prompts parishioners' suit

Wednesday, April 22nd 2009, 4:00 AM

Manhattan's Riverside Church - one of the country's most illustrious religious institutions - is paying its new senior pastor, the Rev. Brad Braxton, more than $600,000 in annual compensation.

That's twice what Braxton's predecessor, James Forbes, one of the country's best-known preachers, was getting after running Riverside for more than 18 years.

It amounts to almost 10 times what William Sloane Coffin, the legendary anti-Vietnam War clergyman, was paid in his last year as senior minister at Riverside in 1987.

Braxton was selected in a vote of the congregation last fall and is to be officially installed Sunday.

A group of church dissidents claims the members were never told about the lavish package.

Those dissidents filed suit in Manhattan Supreme Court last week to stop Braxton's installation, revealing a growing divide among the church's 1,500 members.

The Wall Street-like package, the dissidents say, is outrageous for a man of the cloth - especially when you consider Riverside's long history of advocating social justice.

Church sources say it includes:

  • $250,000 in salary.
  • $11,500 monthly housing allowance.
  • Private school tuition for his child.
  • A full-time maid.
  • Entertainment, travel and "professional development" allowances.
  • Pension and life insurance benefits.
  • An equity allowance for Braxton to save up to buy a home.

On top of that, Braxton immediately hired a new second in command at more than $300,000 a year.

"Where's the social justice in this?" said Diana Solomon-Glover, a member of the church choir and one of the petitioners in the suit.

"We have an economic crisis in the country, and none of the church staff are getting raises this year, but a few people at the top are getting these huge salaries?"

In a hearing Tuesday, Manhattan Supreme Court Judge Lewis Bart Stone denied the dissidents' request to delay Sunday's installation. The judge urged church leaders to provide the opposition a fair chance to be heard by the church membership.

He adjourned the case until after a special meeting of the congregation scheduled for May 3.

The two sides should find a way to achieve "some form of fellowship and reconciliation between members of the church," Stone said, to "prevent a split."

"They [the dissidents] don't want to accept that the majority has already spoken," said Sarah Conly, who backs Braxton. The vote last fall to appoint Braxton was overwhelming, his supporters say.

"I don't know why they even brought this case into court," said Jean Schmidt, vice chair of the Church Council, one of the key officials who brought in Braxton.

"If the members of the church had known what his total compensation was when we voted, we wouldn't have chosen him," said Virl Andrick, a 25-year member of the church and of its budget and planning commission.

Only a tiny group in the leadership has details of the contract, he said.

"There's a problem with the process," Andrick said. As an interdenominational church, Riverside is affiliated with the United Church of Christ and the American Baptist Churches, but the two denominations have very distinct governing philosophies.

Congregational churches "have complete transparency on finances," Andrick said. "Members know everything about the church's finances and the pastor's salary."

Baptist churches, on the other hand, tend to keep vital information among key church leaders.

Entry #379

Security guard punched after couple steals diapers

 

 

Tuesday, April 21, 2009 - Page updated at 12:46 PM

Couple shoplift $18 worth of diapers in Spokane

By By; Jody Lawrence-Turner

The Spokesman-Review

SPOKANE — A couple allegedly shoplifted $18 worth of diapers from a Spokane Safeway last weekend, possibly part of a growing trend of desperation crimes triggered by the recession.

Shoplifting arrests have increased by nearly 80 percent from 2007 to 2008 in Kootenai County, according to the Sheriff's Office. In Spokane County, authorities have seen an increase in property crimes that exceeds any level in the past 10 years, according to a crime analyst at the Spokane Police Department.

Richard Rosenfeld, a professor of criminology at the University of Missouri-St. Louis, told The Spokesman-Review last month that an economic downturn leads to more crimes committed to meet necessities.

On Saturday, a security guard stopped the couple walking out of Safeway on Francis Avenue at North Monroe Street about 5:30 p.m. with Huggies in their cart, authorities said. The man yelled, "Sorry," then punched the security guard, leaving a mark on the guard's cheek, according to a Spokane County Sheriff's Office press release.

The security guard grabbed the man's shirt to stop his escape, but the shirt ripped off, Sgt. Dave Reagan said. The man ran from the area.

Meanwhile, the woman continued to a silver SUV with the diapers, Reagan said. After the security guard ordered her to stop, the woman got into the passenger side, then slid into the driver's seat and drove away. Police were trying to locate the couple. The Washington plate on the vehicle was similar to 546YBG, Reagan said.

 

Entry #378

Employee steals from Wal-mart post them for sale on employee bulletin board

http://www.billingsgazette.net/articles/2009/04/21/news/state/40-walmart.txt

Published on Tuesday, April 21, 2009.
Last modified on 4/21/2009 at 6:30 pm

Police: Man tries to sell items taken at Wal-Mart

By Gazette News Services

GREAT FALLS - An employee at the Wal-Mart in Great Falls faces felony theft charges for allegedly taking electronics from the store and posting the items for sale on an employee bulletin board.

Remo Spencer was arrested Saturday at Wal-Mart.

Spencer had posted an ad on an employee bulletin board indicating that he had several iPods and computers for sale.

A manager became suspicious and reviewed surveillance footage, discovering the thefts.

Police say Remo returned eight laptop computers and seven iPods valued at nearly $7,000.

Entry #377

Man Finds Suspect Watching TV In His Home

Man Finds Suspect Watching TV In His Home

SACRAMENTO (CBS13)

A Sacramento man got quite a surprise when he returned home and found a stranger chilling out on his living room couch and watching TV.  And that's not the only thing the accused burglar did in the man's home. 

25-year-old Joshua Ochoa is behind bars this morning facing burglary charges. He was busted when Joseph Magee returned home from a workout and found Ochoa sitting in the living room watching ESPN.  And that's not all.  Ochoa made himself right at home taking a shower, eating a few bagel bites and drinking some apple juice.

Ochoa told police that he thought he was in his brother's apartment and found the front door unlocked. But the homeowner insists he left the door locked.

 Link to Interview

Entry #376

Man faked robbery to get girl back

 

Police: Man faked robbery to get girl back

Published: April 21, 2009 at 6:37 PM

Authorities in Florida said they arrested a man who allegedly faked an armed robbery to gain sympathy from his estranged girlfriend.

The Martin County Sheriff's Office said Derick Culberson, 22, of Palm City, told deputies Friday night that two men armed with a silver pistol stole his vehicle's GPS device and bound his hands and ankles with plastic zip ties, TCPalm.com reported Tuesday.

Investigators said inconsistencies in Culberson's story made them suspicious and they discovered zip ties in his truck that were similar to the ones on his wrists and ankles when deputies arrived on the scene.

The sheriff's office report of the incident states Culberson eventually admitted to inventing the robbery "in an attempt to make his girlfriend feel bad for leaving him."

"Culberson admitted to tying his own hands and feet, and further inventing the suspects' vehicle and weapon descriptions that he gave to sheriff's office dispatch and deputies," the report states.

Culberson was arrested and charged with misdemeanor false report of the commission of a crime. He was released Saturday from the Martin County jail after posting $250 bail.
Entry #375

Mom orders daughters out and drives off

April 20, 2009

9:15 pm 

WHITE PLAINS, N.Y. (AP) -- Usually, it's an empty threat: "If you kids don't stop fighting, I'm going to stop this car right now and leave you here!"

But a mother from an upper-crust New York suburb went through with it, ordering her battling 10- and 12-year-old daughters out of her car in White Plains' business district and driving off, police said Tuesday.

Madlyn Primoff, 45, a partner in a Manhattan law firm, pleaded not guilty Monday to a charge of endangering a child. A temporary order of protection was issued, barring her from contact with the children, who were physically unharmed.

Primoff's lawyer, Vincent Briccetti, would not comment Tuesday on details of the case. But he said, "Madlyn is a great mother connected with a great family, and she is grateful for the outpouring of support from friends and family."

There wasn't much support from strangers, however. Mothers interviewed near the scene said they couldn't imagine doing what Primoff did, though some understood the urge.

Iris Gorodess, 49, of Mahopac, who has four children ranging from 10 to 19 years old, said she sympathized with Primoff's actions, right up to the point where she pulled away.

"I used to pull over and make the kids change seats. Also, I make sure the kids have their iPods and their games. And I have a minivan, so they're not up my neck all the time.

"But I can't see pulling away. That has to be too scary for the children."

White Plains police said Primoff ordered the arguing girls out of the car Sunday evening as they were driving home. She left them at Post Road and South Broadway, an area of shops and offices 3 miles from their home, then drove off, the police report said.

The report does not say whether the girls had cell phones.

Police would not say if Primoff ever returned to look for the girls, but they said, without explaining how, that the 12-year-old eventually caught up with the mother. The 10-year-old was found by a "Good Samaritan" on the street, upset and emotional about losing her mother, police said.

The girl gave police her mother's name and their address in well-to-do Scarsdale, and they asked Scarsdale police to check Primoff's $2 million house. Shortly afterward, Primoff called Scarsdale police from home to say the 10-year-old was missing, said Scarsdale Detective Lt. Bryant Clark.

He directed her to White Plains police headquarters, where she was arrested.

Dr. Richard Gersh, director of psychiatric services at the Jewish Board of Family and Children's Services in Manhattan, said Primoff's behavior was not appropriate.

"It is a traumatic situation for a child to be abandoned by a parent like that. You can imagine what emotional issues might arise," he said.

Entry #374

Chewing tobacco trail leads to charges in tavern burglary

Published - Monday, April 20, 2009

Chewing tobacco trail leads to charges in tavern burglary
ANNE JUNGEN

A DNA profile recovered from chewing tobacco spit led to criminal charges against two La Crosse men accused of stealing a safe containing more than $3,000 in cash and beer tokens from a town of Campbell bar.

The owner of Sher-Bear Tavern at 328 Goodard St. told officers a large safe bolted to a kitchen counter was stolen early Feb. 5 after a door was pried open with a crowbar, according to the criminal complaint filed today in La Crosse County Circuit Court.
The key to unlock the safe was found untouched near the safe.

A fisherman found the safe and a tavern voucher for a six-pack of beer Feb. 9 on a sandbar in the Kaskaskia River south of Carlyle, Ill.

Officers collected a sample from the trail of chewing tobacco spit leading away from the tavern, the complaint stated.

DNA from the saliva matched Brian Scholl, 21, who was arrested Tuesday, according to the complaint.

From the La Crosse County Jail, Scholl called a woman who was storing his car and asked her to remove the safe, which he believed still was in his trunk, the complaint stated.

A search of the vehicle produced a receipt for a $77.44 hotel room rented to Joel Cruz, 21, the day after the burglary about 30 miles from where the safe was discovered, according to the complaint.
Entry #372

Judge orders defendant's mouth taped shut

Inmate duct taped

Nicklas Frasure


POCATELLO -- The first hint that Nicklas Frasure's hearing was going to be unusual came at the outset when the man attempted to fire his court-appointed counsel. It eventually culminated with the man's mouth bound with duct tape in an attempt to quell his frequent and irrational outbursts.

Frasure, 23, appeared before Sixth District Judge Peter D. McDermott Monday morning for an evidentiary hearing on reports of a probation violation for a 2008 felony theft conviction. Frasure's counsel, Kent Reynolds, requested near the outset that his client undergo a competency exam, a point Frasure hotly contested.
"I'm totally fine," Frasure said. "I have a sense of humor. I'm not bad looking. I can walk on my hands."

Frasure's tangential and odd comments persisted throughout the hearing, with his mood rapidly changing from incredulity to outrage to apparent mirth regarding his court appearance. At one point, Frasure referred to his appearance as a form of "terrorism."
"I'm not only innocent, but a victim," Frasure said. "I need to be released."

McDermott, whose general demeanor toward defendants is patient and gentle, tried unsuccessfully on numerous occasions to quiet Frasure's insistent non sequiturs until after the prosecutor and his own attorney had concluded.
Frasure's mother took the stand to describe her son's behavior, including escalating bouts of drinking and erratic behavior. The woman said Frasure had been much better after his release from State Hospital South in Blackfoot in October but had quit taking his medications shortly after his discharge.

"The last two months he started being really bizarre," the woman said.
The woman described how her son had calmly told her that a voice had told him to "take a shotgun and blow your head off."

The presence of his mother on the stand increased Frasure's outbursts, many of them referring to his needless persecution and his religious faith. Frasure continued to interrupt the proceedings, asking his mother to admit to murder.
McDermott continued to warn Frasure to no avail about his outbursts and told him he would have a chance to address the court and pose questions of witnesses. He finally threatened to duct tape the man's mouth if he did not be quiet.

After several more lengthy and jumbled outbursts and additional warnings about a gag being employed, McDermott finally indicated he'd had enough, ordering the bailiffs to duct tape the man's mouth. The proceedings halted for several minutes while bailiffs retrieved the tape, tore a piece from the roll and applied it over the man's mouth.
Reynold's renewed his request for a competency exam.

"He's obviously not mentally competent," Reynolds said.
McDermott told Reynolds he would continue to take the request under advisement and continued the evidentiary hearing. Frasure continued to speak throughout the hearing despite the gag, insistently asking his mother if she were guilty of murder.

"I don't know how to proceed when Mr. Frasure is totally psychotically disabled," Reynolds said, causing McDermott to ask the woman if she felt her son was mentally ill and might harm her. The woman replied "yes" to both questions.
Frasure's probation officer, Julie Guiberson, took the stand and opined that the man was a threat to both himself and others, and particularly to his mother.

"He is probably the most mentally unstable person I have ever supervised," Guiberson said.

Guiberson noted that one of the probation provisions that Frasure was alleged to have violated was a requirement to take all prescribed medications. She said that Frasure had admitted to having stopped taking his medications due to side effects.

At the close of the hearing, Frasure's gag was removed and he again engaged in a rambling discourse. McDermott thanked the man for his comments.

McDermott declined to make a determination regarding Frasure's alleged probation violations, deciding to commit the man to a secure Department of Correction facility in Boise for evaluation and treatment rather than the non-secure facility in Blackfoot.

"I want to see you get better," McDermott told Frasure.

"You want to arm wrestle?" was Frasure's reply before being led from the courtroom by bailiffs.

 

By John Bulger

 

This document was originally published online on Tuesday, April 21, 2009

Entry #371

Dr Pepper picks up wedding tab

 

Dr Pepper picks up wedding tab

Published: April 20, 2009 at 7:23 PM

A Virginia woman who auctioned off a bridesmaid spot on eBay said the sale also resulted in free beverages when it was won by soda company Dr Pepper.

Kelly Gray said the auction last summer was meant as a way to raise money for her wedding to Karl Gau, which took place Sunday in Virginia Beach, but the soda maker's victory meant that she received not only a $10,000 donation toward wedding costs, but also a free supply of Dr Pepper for the reception, the (Norfolk) Virginian-Pilot reported Monday.

Gray said news of Dr Pepper's donation led several other businesses to supply the wedding cake, DJ photo booth and other wedding must-haves.

The bride said she had an ice sculpture at the ceremony carved to resemble a vintage Diet Dr Pepper bottle as a tribute to the benefactor.

"I thought it would cool, kind of a good way to give back," she said. "If it wasn't for Diet Dr Pepper, it wouldn't have been this dream wedding."



© 2009 United Press International, Inc. All Rights Reserved.

Entry #370

Rare blue diamond to bring $8.5 million

Rare blue diamond to bring $8.5 million

April 20, 2009 • 4:29 pm

 A rare, 7.03-carat blue diamond, expected to bring up to $8.5 million at auction, is on display in New York.

Just a little $8.5 million trinket

Just a little $8.5 million trinket (AP Photo)

 Sotheby’s New York previewed the vivid blue diamond today which is slightly smaller than a dime and shaped like a cushion. It will be sold in Geneva on May 12.

 The conditions that are required to form a colored diamond seldom occur in nature, making them extremely rare. Sotheby’s said the gem also was notable for its clarity. 

The diamond was unearthed last year in the Cullinan diamond mine, northeast of Pretoria, South Africa. The stone was cut from a 26.58-carat diamond in the rough.

Entry #369

Mothers, sons reunited 2 years after baby swap

Mothers, sons reunited 2 years after baby swap in Russian clinic

16:10 | 20/ 04/ 2009

MOSCOW, April 20 (RIA Novosti) - Two families have exchanged their toddlers after a DNA test confirmed that the children were confused in a maternity ward, Russian media said on Monday.

The two boys, who were born on March 1, 2007, in Mtsensk in the Central Russian Oryol region, were confused by a nurse hours after their birth, the popular Komsomolskaya Prada daily reported. As a result, Russian woman Anna Androsova was discharged from hospital with a dark-haired, brown-eyed boy named Nikita, while Zarema Taisumova left for Chechnya with a blonde, blue-eyed baby named Adlan.

Though the children bore little resemblance to their families, the parents did not suspect anything until Androsova found a hospital label with Taisumova's name on it.

Androsova met with the Taisumovs, but they did not believe her. The Russian woman then sought a DNA test, which confirmed she was not the biological mother of the child she had raised as her own.

In December 2008, the Mtsensk District Court ruled that the children should be brought up in their biological families, and ordered the families to swap again.

Androsova won 150,000 rubles ($4,400) in compensation from the maternity ward. The second family also plans to sue the clinic.

The nurse who made the mistake has been fired.

 


Entry #368