The baby who was cut from a young teenage mother’s womb before she was murdered in Chicago, Illinois, is now breathing on his own and continues to recover in the hospital, the family said.
“It’s still a long way to go for the baby, but the baby is fighting and surviving,” Avila said.
Julie Contreras, a family friend, asked the public to continue praying for him, WLS reported.
Deceived and Strangled
Last week on May 25, the family held a funeral for the baby’s mother, Marlen Ochoa-Lopez.Ochoa-Lopez was murdered in April. Police said the 19-year-old mother, who was nine months pregnant, was strangled to death and her baby was forcibly removed from her body.
Ochoa-Lopez went missing on April 23 after she was lured to a meeting that had been arranged over Facebook to a Southwest Side home to supposedly pick up free baby items.
Police said that 46-year-old Clarisa Figueroa murdered Ochoa-Lopez and then cut the baby out of her womb.
After cutting the baby out of the 19-year-old mother’s womb, Figueroa then allegedly phoned 911 to say she had just given birth to a baby who wasn’t breathing, according to police.
Paramedics transported Figueroa to the hospital in Oak Lawn, a suburb of Chicago, where she reportedly underwent a physical exam that determined she had not given birth.
Police announced May 16 that three people—Figueroa, her 24-year-old daughter, Desiree Figueroa, and Figueroa’s boyfriend, 40-year-old Piotr Bobak—had been arrested and charged in connection with Ochoa-Lopez’s death.
Officials Not Alerted
Prosecutors said that when Figueroa was brought with the baby to the hospital, she had blood on her upper body and her face, which a hospital employee cleaned off. They also said Figueroa was examined at the hospital and showed no physical signs of childbirth.Police and Illinois’s child welfare agency said staff at Advocate Christ Medical Center didn’t alert them after finding that Figueroa did not give birth to the baby boy as she claimed.
On May 18, Illinois Department of Children and Family Services spokesman Jassen Strokosch said that the agency had been alerted on May 9 that there were questions about who had custody of the child in order to make medical decisions. He said he couldn’t speculate about why the agency wasn’t contacted sooner.
Legal Action in the Works
Avila told WLS that his team is trying to access records that are protected by HIPAA, the Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act of 1996. Avila indicated that he anticipates legal action but was not at liberty to discuss details.Meanwhile, Ochoa-Lopez’s family is pushing for lawmakers to enforce DNA testing for newborns, including other measures.
If passed into law, it would require hospital staff to check the identification of an adult who presents with a newborn—something that was lacking in baby Yovani’s case.