Baby who was stolen from medical center now doing well

Feb 21, 2006 3:55 PM


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The newborn baby abducted earlier this month from his mother's room at The Medical Center of Central Georgia is gaining weight and out of the hospital, but this time around he's in his mother's arms, The Macon Telegrah reports.
On Feb. 6, police announced that a woman posing as a hospital employee took Timillion Keshon Trawick and walked out of the hospital. Nearly five hours later, police found the baby at a nearby home, and a 16-year-old was charged with kidnapping.
District Attorney Howard Simms says a hearing later this year will determine whether she will be tried as an adult.
The baby's mother, Keisha Robinson, says she is still upset with the hospital and disagrees with statements made after the abduction by a hospital official that "the system didn't fail."
"To me it's not an explanation," Robinson says. "If it didn't fail, the baby wouldn't have gotten out of the hospital."
Medical Center officials have said that more than six minutes passed from the time the first alarm went off to the time Timillion left the building.
"It doesn't make sense that someone would be able to get out of the hospital with a baby when the alarm's going off saying there's a baby missing," Robinson's attorney, Peter Ross, says.
Andy Galloway, senior vice president of the Medical Center, said the Medical Center has increased security in the maternity ward, and officials are still considering what permanent changes to make.
"We take great pains to have a system that protects the safety and security of our patients. It obviously is not perfect system, we learned," he says. "In the world we live in today, sometimes bad things happen despite your best efforts."
Galloway adds that abductions at any hospital are rare and that the Medical Center has never had one before.

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