“One of our patients just had a baby and we had no idea she was pregnant.” The woman’s voice shakes as she speaks to the emergency call operator. “The baby’s turning blue! We need someone now.”
This 911 call was the moment authorities in Phoenix, Arizona, were alerted to a sexual assault case that has since caused a ripple of shock around the world.
Officers were called to Hacienda Healthcare facility on the afternoon of December 29, after a 29-year-old woman, who has been in a vegetative state for a number of years, gave birth.
The five-minute audio clip, released by Phoenix police today, captures a shocked Hacienda nurse updating the operator on the condition of the baby, who was unresponsive for several minutes after delivery.
“The baby is not breathing, the baby is blue. They’re doing CPR on the baby,” she says. “Mum looks like she’s doing well. We had no idea this person was pregnant. We had no idea this patient was pregnant.”
Mid-way through the roughly five-minute call, the nurse appears to speak to someone who enters the room: “She had a baby!” “Who had a baby?” a voice in the background responds.
“Look!” the nurse says. “There’s a baby right there.”
Content warning: the following video may be distressing to some viewers.
Both child and the mother, whose identity is not being made public, are now reportedly in a stable condition, as police probe the disturbing sexual assault case.
Investigators this week collected DNA samples from all the male staff at the facility, where they believe she was raped several times.
In a press conference on Thursday, Sergeant Tommy Thompson of the City of Phoenix Police said the woman has been incapacitated – “unable to move, unable to communicate” – for several years.
According to court records cited by CNN, the patient was aged just three when she entered the facility. Local network CBS 5 reported that she had been the victim of a near-drowning incident.
How could this happen?
The case has outraged disability advocates and members of the community, with many questioning how the pregnancy could go undetected.
Speaking to ABC, Professor C Kevin Huls, maternal-foetal medicine fellowship director at the University of Arizona, said it would be possible for a woman who is tube-fed the same amount each day to not show substantial physical changes during pregnancy.
“A good way to understand it is that, really, the baby’s going to continue to grow even at the expense of the mum’s nutrition,” Prof. Huls said.
“So, her weight may not change because she’s not taking in additional calories.”
The CEO of the facility has resigned since the incident, but that has done little to appease the victim’s relatives.
In a statement quoted by CNN, the attorney representing her relatives, John Micheaels, said, “The family obviously is outraged, traumatised and in shock by the abuse and neglect of their daughter at Hacienda HealthCare.
“The family would like me to convey that the baby boy has been born into a loving family and will be well cared for.”
There are currently no suspects and the investigation is expected to run long-term.
Top Comments
This story is sad but I have to wonder how common. I remember this being a storyline on like SVU years ago. Imagine how many coverups have happened like this? Imagine how many defenceless, disabled people have been raped or abused that haven’t resulted in a visible obvious answer like a baby to show for it. You have to wonder what really goes on in care facilities when you leave your loved one to their care and you aren’t around....
This is so sick. Why do they call it 'sexual assault' at times, when what happened was clearly rape?
Why on earth are patients in any kind of unresponsive state not in a room that is monitored by cameras the whole time? These patients are in such a tremendously vulnerable state.This is not the first time we have seen a case like this. Women in these states should never be left unmonitored and - I'm sorry if any chaps are offended - but it should only ever be female staff attending them.
Apart from this the whole issue of patient awareness when they are in a 'vegetative state' is open to interpretation. We do not know conclusively that they are completely unaware. Medics routinely refer to things such as eyes opening, moaning, fingers moving, etc as just "reflexes". Come on. None of us really know. We are not inside that patient's head.