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Sugar Cookie

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A Florida mother is demanding answers after her daughter became pregnant while incarcerated in a Miami jail, according to a report.
Daisy Link, 28, who is being held at the Turner Guilford Knight Correctional Center on a murder rap, revealed to her mom Josie Ramos on Christmas Day that she was pregnant, according to NBC Miami.

Link told Ramos that another inmate housed elsewhere in the facility — also facing a murder charge — passed her a semen-filled glove through an air conditioning vent on multiple occasions.
Local 10 reported that Link said she had never met the man, and had only spoken to him through the vent.

He was housed on an upper floor above Link, according to the station.
But Ramos told NBC that she didn’t believe the explanation.

“I know this did not happen,” Ramos told NBC. “I heard what they said happened which is the A/C vent thing which is ludicrous and ridiculous.”

Link’s attorney said jail officials told him Link became pregnant through an “unconventional method” — but didn’t specify.

The baby’s father has since been removed from the facility.
Link is now three months pregnant, and Ramos told the station that she’s worried about her welfare while being held in the facility’s mental health unit.

“I want to see if someone in the courthouse can see this and let her out so she can get proper prenatal medical care because you don’t come out of a jail impregnated by anyone while you’re still awaiting a trial,” Ramos said.

According to Link’s arrest report, she fatally shot a man outside her Homestead home on June 25, 2022.
Police said the shooting was domestic in nature and that Link shot the man once in the leg.

According to the report, Link was captured on surveillance video telling the victim, “I think I hit a major artery. You’ll be fine.”
Local 10 News reporter Cody Weddle spoke to Link’s sister, Crystal Barreto, Wednesday, who said she doesn’t believe the rumors about how her sister became pregnant and wants a thorough investigation into what happened.

“She has the right to her due process,” Barreto said. “They never tried to help her out. They mocked her and laughed at her in the beginning when she asked for help. They never tried to exactly get the whole true story, they never took her to get a rape treatment. They never really tried to help her out until we reached out to the media, which they asked us not to do. Now they’re trying to come up with all kinds of different scenarios about what happened to her.”

MDCR has not yet confirmed who impregnated Link or how she became pregnant.

“The MDCR has healthcare procedures in place to ensure the safety of all those in our custody, any unborn child, and staff, in any case of pregnancy while in our care,” Diasgranados said. “Pregnant inmates receive timely and appropriate prenatal care; specialized obstetrical services, when indicated by the CHS; and time for postpartum recovery. Additionally, any housing assignments for pregnant inmates are made in consultation with Correctional Health Services, and when necessary, the inmate’s outside obstetrician.”
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The Grand Egg & Baby "Hairs" Daddy

The woman is an adult who gives a damn what her mama thinks or wants.

Being mentally ill did not stop her from killing someone so her ass needs to stay right where she is.

Also do not let this woman get custody of her grandchild - because the child will end up just like it's mama - going to prison.

The family is looking to sue.
 
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The Grand Egg & Baby "Hairs" Daddy

The woman is an adult who gives a damn what her mama thinks or wants.

Being mentally ill did not stop her from killing someone so her ass needs to stay right where she is.

Also do not let this woman get custody of her grandchild - because the child will end up just like it's mama - going to prison.

The family is looking to sue.
but it still doesn't explain how she got pregnant while in jail, isn't she "housed" with women only??? and where would and inmate find the gloves to be able to "passed her a semen-filled glove through an air conditioning vent on multiple occasions." i didn't think surgical or rubber gloves were items issed to inmates...
 
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A judge postponed a decision Wednesday over whether to transfer a Florida inmate who became pregnant while she was incarcerated from the county jail to house arrest, pending the release of medical and corrections records first.
Daisy Link, 28, has been at the Turner Guilford Knight Correctional Center in Miami-Dade County since June 2022. On Christmas Day, she called family members from jail and told them she was pregnant, according to her sister, Crystal Barreto. The circumstances that led to the pregnancy are unclear, and they have prompted an investigation by the Miami-Dade Corrections and Rehabilitation Department.
Link is awaiting trial on a charge of second-degree murder, which her attorney, Marlene Montaner, says arose from a domestic violence incident during which Link feared for her life. She has been held without bond at the correctional center, which houses both male and female inmates, and does not have a trial date yet.
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At a hearing Wednesday, Montaner asked state circuit Judge Lody Jean to reconsider a previous order denying Link’s pretrial release, saying Link is now about 19 weeks pregnant but has received prenatal vitamins on only 19 days of her pregnancy. She suggested Link live with her sister under home confinement with electronic monitoring instead of being behind bars.

“There is an alternative to her being incarcerated,” Montaner said in court. “My client’s baby’s health is at risk.”
Link answered several questions from the judge, agreeing when she was asked whether she consented to have her medical records introduced in court. More medical records dating to the start of her pregnancy will be turned over to the prosecution, and corrections records documenting Link’s requests for health treatment in jail will be turned over to the judge, who will review them to see whether they have evidentiary value and can be used by the defense.
Montaner said Link’s records show that she asked jail officials for a pregnancy test as early as Nov. 7 but was not granted one until late December. She said Link has also asked for, and been denied, Gatorade to help with dehydration from morning sickness.
The Miami-Dade Corrections and Rehabilitation Department did not immediately respond to a request for comment on the allegations. A spokesperson for the department said that pregnant inmates receive “timely and appropriate prenatal care” and that the department confirmed Link’s pregnancy after a thorough medical exam, but it has not commented on who may have impregnated her.


“While there is no evidence of sexual battery against our inmate at this time, the circumstances surrounding the pregnancy are currently under active investigation,” the spokesperson said in an email in January.
Montaner said Link needs to be transferred out of jail as soon as possible.


“I am very worried that we keep postponing a decision,” Montaner said in a phone interview after Wednesday’s hearing. “The baby deserves the protection of the court and the protection of having the right care.”
In court, Montaner said that “it was not an assault” that caused her client’s pregnancy, but she did not elaborate. Barreto, Link’s sister, said Link has not felt comfortable sharing details over the jail’s recorded phone lines, and Montaner said Florida does not allow conjugal visits.
“What I want the judge to consider is that she really wasn’t a danger to anybody but the man who’s deceased,” Montaner said. “It’s not fair for her to be in jail. It wasn’t fair before she got pregnant.”
 
A Florida woman who became pregnant while an inmate at a Miami jail gave birth to the girl in June, but her family is still awaiting answers as to how the pregnancy happened.
Daisy Link, 29, is charged with second-degree murder after she allegedly killed her husband in 2022. But she told her family in a phone call last Christmas that she became pregnant while an inmate in the Turner Guilford Knight Correctional Center. She reportedly attributed the pregnancy to a male inmate who passed a glove with semen on it through an air conditioning vent.
Link then told her family that she was sexually assaulted but later told her lawyer that was not the case.
Her sister Crystal Bareto told Miami ABC affiliate WVSN that Link gave birth to the girl in June.

“The baby was born June 19th and 48 hours [later], they handed the baby over to an inmate’s mother,” she said. “We don’t even know if that’s the real family.”
The Miami-Dade Corrections and Rehabilitation Department is investigating. It previously said there was no evidence of a sexual assault. WSVN reports that the investigation is ongoing.

Bareto said she believes an outside agency needs to investigate the jail, calling the entire ordeal “absurd.”

“We never really got the real, true story about what happened to her in there,” Bareto told WVSN. “And I feel like as time passed, the investigation, the story of what happened to my sister has been swept under the rug.”
 
I don't know, if this were my daughter or one of my nieces, I'd try to keep this shit a little quieter myself. :banghead:
What the fuck does she expect to happen?
The child is going to grow up with everyone around it saying it was that "glove cum bastard".
Jesus, have some brain.
I know some people pray for a moment of fame, but have some imagination.

I don't get them at all.
I sometimes help my friend who works with teenagers, and I watch my back 24/7, so I don't end up as some barely older than them weirdo on Tic Tac
 
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The child should not be with anyone in their gene pool - sadly she is with the paternal grandmother.

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What happened inside a jail in South Florida made national headlines. Tonight for the first time we are hearing exclusively from both the mother and father. Investigative reporter Heather Walker is at the Turner Guilford Knight Correctional Center in West Miami-Dade.

7News broke this story back in January when the woman’s family wanted to know how this could happen here. The DNA results are in and the dad is another inmate.

Daisy Link: “Hello.”

For the first time, Daisy Link is talking about how she became pregnant in jail.


In an exclusive interview with 7Investigates, the 29-year-old said even she can’t believe it happened.

Daisy Link: “It’s a real twist, it is. Everybody says it to me, this is like some Lifetime Movie Network.”

Link is locked up awaiting trial, charged with second-degree murder.

Police said Link was holding a gun after shooting her boyfriend in the leg, killing him.

Surveillance video: “You’ll be fine.”

She has been an inmate at TGK for more than two years. But in June, Link gave birth to a baby girl.

Daisy Link: “She’s a miracle baby, she’s a blessing.”

A miracle because Link said she’s never met the father of her baby face-to-face.

Daisy Link: “I’ve never met him. I’ve never, it’s crazy.”

He was also a TGK inmate and, like Link, is charged with murder.

The DNA results show inmate number 200147865, Joan Depaz, is the baby’s father.

Automated message: “This call is from the Miami-Dade Metro West Detention Center.”

Heather Walker: “So you guys have never physically touched each other?”

Joan Depaz: “Never, like the Virgin Mary.”

Heather Walker: “The big question here is how did this happen?”

Daisy Link: “Through the vent.”

Link said she and Depaz started talking through A/C vents in their cells.

Daisy Link: “You would knock on it and you can hear the people from the different floors. You would stand on the toilet actually to be able to talk to them.”

They said they also passed notes and pictures.

Daisy Link: “Being in isolation for so long you begin to spend hours and hours talking to this person, you know, to the point where it’s almost as if you’re in the same room with them.”

Link and Depaz formed a romantic relationship and the 23-year-old shared his dream.

Joan Depaz: “I always really wanted to have a baby. And I’m not gonna get to do that for a really long time. So if I had to choose somebody, you know, it would be you. And she was like, ‘Yeah, we could do that.'”

Depaz came up with a plan.

Joan Depaz: “Not gonna lie, this is gonna go down in history.”

Daisy Link: “I don’t know what my fate is, you kind of don’t know what’s yours. If we’re gonna go out might as well just go out with a bang, you know? If it works, it works. But it definitely did.”

Joan Depaz: “I told her a way that one of my friends had showed me through the vent. Because the vents is like a L-shape, really. It drops right into my vent, from her room, she could throw a pen into the vent and it’ll land right into my vent.”

Daisy Link: “We had figured out a way to drop the line. It was a line that we had established out of like bedding material.”

Joan Depaz: “I put the semen in Saran Wrap every day like five times a day for like a month straight.”

Daisy Link: “He would kind of like roll it up almost like a cigarette and he would attach it to the line that we had in the vent and I would pull it through. From there, I had placed it inside of, you know, the yeast infection applicators? I had placed it inside of there and then from there, yeah, I administered it.”

She said it only took a few tries before she became pregnant.

Daisy Link: “I was very excited. I was ecstatic about it.”

Heather Walker: “Is this possible?”

Dr. Fernando Akerman/fertility specialist: “Yes, that’s the short answer.”

Dr. Fernando Akerman is the medical director of the Fertility Center of Miami. He said the chances of this resulting in a successful pregnancy are slim, but not impossible.

Dr. Fernando Akerman: “We estimate that probably their chances were less than five percent, but that is not to say that the chances were zero. So this is absolutely a case that is exceedingly unusual. To my knowledge I’ve never heard or read anything like this.”

On June 19, the baby was born at Jackson Memorial Hospital.

Daisy Link: “I can’t believe it worked. I think everything happened for a reason.”

Joan Depaz: “Over here I’m like a celebrity.”

Their baby is now five months old. She’s living with his mom, who became a grandmother for the first time.

Link and Depaz, who are now in different jails, still talk on the phone and see their daughter on video visits.
Daisy Link: “She could be anything. I think that she’s gonna be something great.”
 
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March 13, 2025

Miami-Dade jail officials have finished their investigation into how an inmate became pregnant behind bars. 7’s Heather Walker has the exclusive in tonight’s 7 Investigates.
Longer than a full-term pregnancy — that’s how long it took Miami-Dade Corrections to investigate this strange case. Their report backs up what the inmates told us in jailhouse interviews, but it still leaves unanswered questions like: How could this have happened without staff realizing?

Daisy Link: “They should actually thank me. I found a huge breach in their security. I haven’t gotten a ‘thank you’ yet.”
Officials at the jail say they conducted “a thorough review of this incident…” and concluded there was “insufficient evidence to substantiate staff misconduct.”

However, the jail did make changes after the two inmates conceived a child in a highly inconceivable way.
Joan Depaz: “I put the semen in Saran Wrap every day like five times a day for like a month straight.”

Daisy Link: “He would kind of like roll it up almost like a cigarette and he would attach it to the line that we had in the vent, and I would pull it through. From there, I had placed it inside of, it was the, you know, the yeast infection applicators? I had placed it inside of there, and then from there, yeah, I administered it.”
The records reveal a doctor put in place a procedure “to drastically reduce, if not eliminate applicators/tips in circulation” for inmates.

And that’s not the only security change.
Daisy Link: “I know that they rearranged certain levels, where males are not to be on the same level as females, so that way the vents don’t collide.”

That appears to be true. The details of this “action plan” are redacted. But “the objective is to ensure that inmates are not communicating through the vents as well as transporting contraband throughout the building.”
Joan Depaz: “Not gonna lie, this is gonna go down in history.”

Depaz told investigators no correctional staff was involved or aware of the plan.

Joan Depaz: “Over here, I’m like a celebrity.”

Depaz is no longer in county custody.
Last month, the 24-year-old pleaded guilty to murdering a man and was sentenced to 25 years in state prison.

Link remains at TGK awaiting trial in a separate murder case. Their daughter — who is now almost 9 months old — is living with Depaz’s mother.

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Name:DEPAZ, JOAN

Current Release Date:10/10/2045

Current Prison Sentence History:​

Offense DateOffenseSentence DateCountyCase No.Prison Sentence Length
09/20/2020 2ND DEG.MURD,DANGEROUS ACT 02/13/2025MIAMI-DADE201443525Y 0M 0D
09/20/2020 ROBB. GUN OR DEADLY WPN 02/13/2025MIAMI-DADE201443525Y 0M 0D
 
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A Florida woman who sparked a major prison investigation after becoming pregnant in solitary confinement sobbed as the murder trial for her husband got underway.
Daisy Link, 30, broke down in tears on Monday as jurors were shown police bodycam footage of the moments after she shot her husband Pedro Jimenez in 2022.

Link made headlines after it emerged she had become pregnant with the baby of an accused killer who passed his semen to her through vents at the prison she was being held at while awaiting trial.
Link initially told police that she found Jimenez bleeding in an alley and tried to help him, but later admitted to shooting him in the leg, a wound that proved to be fatal.

In the bodycam footage, she is heard frantically asking officers: 'Is he OK? Is there a pulse?'

Link told investigators she was domestically abused by Jimenez and acted in self-defense.
Her lawyers told jurors this week that her husband was, 'out of control, unhinged, and dangerous'.

Separate footage first shared by NBC6 appeared to show Link calmly walking away from the scene through a park after shooting her husband.
She could be heard telling him: 'I think I hit a major artery, you’ll be fine.'

Link's attorney Antonio Tomas told jurors that the shooting was the result of years of abuse, and said Link tried to leave the relationship a number of times to escape him.

'She did everything she could to get away from this man,' Tomas said. 'The evidence will show he was out of control, unhinged, and dangerous.'
Tomas added that five days before Jimenez was shot, Link claimed to have been pistol-whipped by him during an argument.

The judge previously ruled that jurors would not be told that Link became pregnant while imprisoned, which was suspected to be a plot to avoid incarceration.

Link gave birth to her daughter on June 19, while serving time at the Turner Guilford Knight Correctional Center in West Miami-Dade, Florida.
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