Michael Patrick, a spokesman for the 2nd Judicial District Attorney’s Office, said the office received a petition from the New Mexico Children, Youth and Families Department to pursue charges against the mother. The court document says that after state social workers initiated a safety plan, Carson violated it by requesting to be alone with the baby.
A CYFD spokesman declined to comment on the case or give any details.
{Of course they won't comment because the person they placed with the child should not have been chosen.}
Patrick said prosecutors will file a motion to detain Carson until trial.
According to a criminal complaint filed in Metropolitan Court:
Officers were called to University of New Mexico Hospital around 4:30 a.m. Dec. 16 for a baby who was seizing and unresponsive. Carson told a detective she accidentally knocked the baby off a couch and onto a wooden floor on Dec. 11. Carson said the baby acted normal at first but her condition worsened over the following days, starting with nonstop crying and progressing to her leg twitching and a high fever.
Doctors found “abusive head trauma” such as that caused by violent shaking “with or without head impact” and said the injuries were not consistent with a “short fall as described.”
A doctor told police the baby would’ve been vomiting and lethargic “within minutes” of the injury and that she is “neurologically devastated.”
David Navarro, Carson’s boyfriend and the baby’s father, said it has been “a living nightmare.”
“I’ve been with her for eight years; we have been waiting for this baby. We had three miscarriages … (the baby) changed our lives. There’s no way Chastity would do this kind of thing,” Navarro told the Journal on Friday. “The baby fell; this was an accident.”
Navarro said CYFD took the baby away in January and placed her in his sister’s custody.
{I knew it. She was probably collecting a check while the baby was with the parents}
He said he and Carson have been allowed supervised one-hour visits, four times a week. Navarro said the family is trying to get a second doctor’s opinion because they believe the injuries were the result of a short fall.
Navarro said the baby is no longer in the hospital. He said the couple have been taking parenting classes, going to therapy and doing “anything and everything we can to get our baby back.”
“It’s horrible. I just can’t believe it’s gone to where it’s going right now. It’s just not right,” he said. “CYFD it supposed to help families and reunite. They’re just tearing us apart on the word of one doctor.”