<font size="5"><center>Nurse impostor snatches ill newborn</font size></center>
<font size="4">• Mychel Darthard-Dawodu weighs about 6 pounds and needs medical attention
• Official: Suspect posed as nurse, removed infant's security bracelet
• Infant could face life-threatening situation if given cow's milk, doctor says
• The kidnapper is believed to be driving a red Dodge pickup with black trim</font size>
Police say newborn baby Mychel
Darthard-Dawodu was kidnapped
from a hospital in Lubbock, Texas
CNN
March 10, 2007
LUBBOCK, Texas (CNN) -- A woman posing as a nurse abducted a 3-day-old girl in need of medical attention from a hospital in Lubbock, Texas, on Saturday, police said.
The African-American infant Mychel Darthard-Dawodu has jaundice and weighs about 6 pounds, according to the Amber Alert issued by Lubbock Police Department.
The suspect went into the mother's hospital room and "told the family they needed to take the baby for some tests and left the room," said Lubbock Police Lt. Scott Hudgens at a news conference.
Mychel was wearing a security bracelet, but it was removed, said Gwen Stafford, senior vice president of Covenant Medical Center.
"The hospital has a very sophisticated state-of-the-art security system, which is of course backed up with camera surveillance throughout the hospital," she said.
Family members and hospital staff have watched the surveillance video and say they do not recognize the woman, police said.
Stafford said later in a news conference that she would not release details about the mother because of privacy concerns, but the mother was "distraught and devastated, and again, our heart goes out to her."
One of the chief concerns would be the child's nourishment, said Dr. Marc Siegel of New York University's medical school.
"The biggest problem is that babies, within the first three days, need either mother's milk or an electrolyte solution. They can't have cow's milk," Siegel said, adding that if the baby is given cow's milk, "there would be a life-threatening problem. Time is of the essence."
Hudgens issued an appeal to the kidnapper: "Please take [the infant] to some place safe, and drop [her] off if need be. That's our main concern right now, the safety of this child."
Police believe Mychel could still be with the suspected kidnapper, who is driving a late-model red Dodge pickup truck with black trim and tinted windows.
Another person may have been in the truck when the suspect got in it with the baby, Hudgens said.
The suspected kidnapper has a medium build and was last seen wearing pink nurse's scrubs with purple and blue flowers and a gray or tan winter coat with a fur hood, police said.
She is about 5-foot-3-inches tall, an African-American in her 20s and her hair is dyed auburn, the Amber Alert said.
Anyone with information about the kidnapping is asked to call the Lubbock Police Department at 806-775-2788, 806-775-2816 or 806-741-1000.
http://www.cnn.com/2007/US/03/10/newborn.kidnapped/index.html
<font size="4">• Mychel Darthard-Dawodu weighs about 6 pounds and needs medical attention
• Official: Suspect posed as nurse, removed infant's security bracelet
• Infant could face life-threatening situation if given cow's milk, doctor says
• The kidnapper is believed to be driving a red Dodge pickup with black trim</font size>

Police say newborn baby Mychel
Darthard-Dawodu was kidnapped
from a hospital in Lubbock, Texas
CNN
March 10, 2007
LUBBOCK, Texas (CNN) -- A woman posing as a nurse abducted a 3-day-old girl in need of medical attention from a hospital in Lubbock, Texas, on Saturday, police said.
The African-American infant Mychel Darthard-Dawodu has jaundice and weighs about 6 pounds, according to the Amber Alert issued by Lubbock Police Department.
The suspect went into the mother's hospital room and "told the family they needed to take the baby for some tests and left the room," said Lubbock Police Lt. Scott Hudgens at a news conference.
Mychel was wearing a security bracelet, but it was removed, said Gwen Stafford, senior vice president of Covenant Medical Center.
"The hospital has a very sophisticated state-of-the-art security system, which is of course backed up with camera surveillance throughout the hospital," she said.
Family members and hospital staff have watched the surveillance video and say they do not recognize the woman, police said.
Stafford said later in a news conference that she would not release details about the mother because of privacy concerns, but the mother was "distraught and devastated, and again, our heart goes out to her."
One of the chief concerns would be the child's nourishment, said Dr. Marc Siegel of New York University's medical school.
"The biggest problem is that babies, within the first three days, need either mother's milk or an electrolyte solution. They can't have cow's milk," Siegel said, adding that if the baby is given cow's milk, "there would be a life-threatening problem. Time is of the essence."
Hudgens issued an appeal to the kidnapper: "Please take [the infant] to some place safe, and drop [her] off if need be. That's our main concern right now, the safety of this child."
Police believe Mychel could still be with the suspected kidnapper, who is driving a late-model red Dodge pickup truck with black trim and tinted windows.
Another person may have been in the truck when the suspect got in it with the baby, Hudgens said.
The suspected kidnapper has a medium build and was last seen wearing pink nurse's scrubs with purple and blue flowers and a gray or tan winter coat with a fur hood, police said.
She is about 5-foot-3-inches tall, an African-American in her 20s and her hair is dyed auburn, the Amber Alert said.
Anyone with information about the kidnapping is asked to call the Lubbock Police Department at 806-775-2788, 806-775-2816 or 806-741-1000.
http://www.cnn.com/2007/US/03/10/newborn.kidnapped/index.html