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Police: Child got drugs from breast milk
date: 13-November-2004
source : HOUSTON CHRONICLE
country: UNITED STATES
keyword: CHILDREN , COCAINE
 
editorial comment editorial comment
Well, they should bust the kid too.....he is lucky, since the are No Child Left Behind anymore...

A mother of six has been indicted on a charge of recklessly causing serious bodily injury to a child by passing drug-tainted breast milk to her 14-month-old daughter.

"I think a Tarrant County jury will probably be outraged by this and will be glad to have a chance to litigate it," prosecutor Mitch Poe told today's Fort Worth Star-Telegram. "Hopefully, this will send a strong message to nursing mothers to stop doing drugs.

Corrina Annette Richardson, 35, remained in the Tarrant County Jail on this morning with bail set at $10,000. She was indicted Wednesday.

When the child was taken to the hospital with seizures in July, her mother initially told officials and relatives that the baby had hit her head on a dresser.

But police say that when tests revealed that the child, Jasmine Thompson, had cocaine in her system, Richardson admitted that she breast-fed her baby after using the drug.

An arrest warrant affidavit said that the drug affected the baby so severely that, "If medical treatment had not been sought, this could have resulted in severe brain damage or even death."

Richardson told Detective R.J. Zomper that she used crack cocaine almost every evening and that she breast-fed the baby and sometimes gave her a bottle, the affidavit says.

"She stated that she knew the cocaine would be in the breast milk that the victim was drinking," Zomper wrote in the affidavit. "She stated that she was told this before when she was in treatment about three years previously. She stated that she tried to dilute the cocaine by drinking milk."

In an earlier interview with a CPS investigator, Richardson said that she had smoked a cigar laced with cocaine and that she didn't realize cocaine could enter her daughter's system through breast-feeding.

Richardson also told the CPS worker that she was supposed to be taking Risperdal, a drug used to treat disorganized or psychotic thinking, but that she had stopped because she was breast-feeding and didn't want to affect her baby.

Jasmine, who stayed in the hospital more than a week, and four of her siblings are being cared for by 62-year-old Irma Scott, the paternal grandmother of Jasmine and one of Richardson's other children. Richardson's sixth child is in prison, Scott said.

Scott said Jasmine, now 18 months old, and the other children -- ages 3, 11, 12 and 13 -- are doing fine.

"I've got a letter from her that she didn't nurse the baby," Scott said. "I just don't know. It was in the baby's system. It got there some kind of way."

She said that Richardson loves her kids. "She is a good mother, but, I guess, she just has got a problem," Scott said. "She cooks for the kids and tries to make sure they always had a little something."

Richardson would usually face two to 20 years in prison if convicted of injury to a child, but because she has a prior conviction for aggravated assault with a deadly weapon, she could face up to life in prison.

Diane Beckham, senior staff counsel for the Texas District and County Attorneys Association, said she knows of no similar prosecution in Texas.

Similar prosecutions though have occurred in California and Arizona. Last year in Riverside, Calif., a woman was convicted of second-degree murder and sentenced to 15 years in prison because her 3-month-old son died after drinking methamphetamine-tainted breast milk.

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