A California woman who allegedly tried to kill her baby inside a McDonald’s restaurant has pleaded no contest to child endangerment.
Lockner was charged with attempting to drown her infant after giving birth inside a McDonald’s bathroom on Sept. 4, 2017, said officials. She was a cashier during her shift when the incident happened.
A co-worker who went inside the bathroom to check on Lockner found the disturbing scene, but Lockner asked the person not to call the police.
However, the employee called the police, who found that the boy had no pulse and wasn’t breathing.
The co-worker told police that they heard the toilet flush.
The boy was taken to the hospital and was placed in a medically induced coma and survived, KPIX reported.
Lockner claimed that she had no idea she was pregnant. Later this year, she is scheduled to appear in court for sentencing.
She was initially charged with attempted murder, but she pleaded no contest to the felony child endangerment plea, said prosecutors.
“The hope is that the child will recover fully,” he said.
Lockner, according to prosecutors, gave birth about five years ago to another child. At the time, Lockner gave birth at home and claimed she didn’t know she was pregnant.
“The outcome here is a reasonable one,” Wagstaffe told the Daily Journal of Lockner’s no contest plea and four-year sentencing. “It does hold her accountable for the harm she tried to inflict on this baby.”
One of The Nation’s Most Serious Concerns
According to a report published by the U.S. Department of Health & Human Services (pdf), around 3.5 million children in 2016 were the subjects of at least one maltreatment report to authorities.“Child abuse is one of the nation’s most serious concerns,” the authors of the report wrote.
About 17 percent of those reports were substantiated, and the department said that there were an estimated 676,000 victims of child abuse and neglect. That amounts to 9.1 victims per 1,000 children.
Children in their first year of life had the highest rate of victimization at 24.8 per 1,000 children, the report said.
About three-fourths of the cases were neglect, and about 18 percent were physical abuse. Some children suffered from multiple forms of maltreatment, the HHS said.