IndianaNews

Newborn girl safely left at northwest Indiana baby box

FILE - In this file photo taken on Thursday, Feb. 26, 2015, Monica Kelsey, firefighter and medic who is president of Safe Haven Baby Boxes Inc., poses with a prototype of a baby box, where parents could surrender their newborns anonymously, outside her fire station in Woodburn, Ind. Kelsey said she is undeterred by a warning from Indiana that they are illegal. (AP Photo/Michael Conroy, File)

HAMMOND, Ind. (AP) — The founder and CEO of Safe Haven Baby Boxes says an infant has been safely left at a new baby box in northwestern Indiana.

Monica Kelsey says a baby girl was left Friday in the baby box at Hammond’s Franciscan Health Hospital. The padded, climate-controlled box there opened Aug. 7.

Kelsey says hospital staff was notified as soon as the box’s outside door was opened and retrieved the newborn within 90 seconds. The child has since been released from the hospital to the custody of the Indiana Department of Child Services

Kelsey says the baby’s mother has contacted her organization and isn’t from the Hammond area.

The baby box program allows a mother to relinquish her newborn anonymously, without fear of prosecution. Two have been surrendered in nearby Michigan City.

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