Florida Woman Lies About Baby Tossed from Car
http://abcnews.go.com/US/wireStory?id=492262
Feb 11, 2005 — By Jim Loney

A baby boy wrapped in a plastic bag was tossed from a car on a street in
North Lauderdale, Florida, about an hour after his birth, police said
February 11, 2005. The newborn, with umbilical cord still attached, was
rushed to a hospital Thursday, where he remained in serious condition. The
baby is seen in the hospital in this handout photo. Photo by Reuters
(Handout)
MIAMI (Reuters) - A woman who told police she saw a newborn boy tossed out
of a car onto a street in North Lauderdale, Florida, is the child's mother
and made up the bizarre story, police said on Friday.
The woman, Patricia Pokriots, 38, has been committed for psychiatric
evaluation and has not been charged with a crime, police said.
The baby, nicknamed Johny, is in stable and improving condition.
Pokriots took the newborn, with umbilical cord still attached, to a police
station on Thursday and told investigators she had seen the child thrown
from a car onto a grassy area in North Lauderdale, just northwest of Fort
Lauderdale.
"The situation has become both happy and sad but it's not as horrible as we
first thought," Broward County Sheriff Ken Jenne said at a news conference
on Friday. "The baby was never thrown out of a moving car.
"This is a case of a disturbed woman who gave birth but did not want to keep
her child and made up an incredible story."
Jenne said Pokriots admitted to investigators on Friday morning that she had
given birth to the child on Thursday in the bathroom of her mother's home.
When Pokriots initially spoke to police, she said she had seen a man and
woman in a white, older model car arguing. The car's passenger door opened
and the baby, wrapped in a plastic bag, was tossed out, she said.
On Friday morning, she told investigators she had put the child into her
pickup truck and was driving to a fire station to give it up when she
encountered the arguing couple in the white car and decided to create a
story around that incident.
Under a Florida statute known as the Safe Haven Law, parents can hand over
newborns up to three days old to the staff of a hospital, firehouse or
ambulance station without being prosecuted.
Jenne said the woman — who had been called a Good Samaritan in initial news
reports — had not been charged with a crime. "Frankly the only charge I
could think of … would be making a false police report," he said of
potential charges.
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