 The husband of a woman accused of  tossing her disabled 7-month-old son off the fourth story of a hospital  parking structure said Wednesday that his wife suffered from postpartum  depression and he doesn't blame her for her actions.
The husband of a woman accused of  tossing her disabled 7-month-old son off the fourth story of a hospital  parking structure said Wednesday that his wife suffered from postpartum  depression and he doesn't blame her for her actions.The  baby, Noe Medina Jr., died of his injuries earlier in the day at the  University of California, Irvine, Medical Center, the same day that his  mother was charged with murder and felony child abuse.
Sonia Hermosillo, 31, made a brief court appearance but did not enter a plea. She is due back in court Thursday.
Prosecutors  allege that Hermosillo removed a helmet that her son wore for a medical  condition before tossing him from the parking structure at Children's  Hospital of Orange County. She then went back inside the hospital to  validate her parking before driving away late Monday, senior deputy  district attorney Scott Simmons said.
 Hermosillo's  husband, Noe Medina, said in an emotional press conference that he  didn't blame his wife and urged women to get treatment if they think  they might have postpartum depression.
Hermosillo's  husband, Noe Medina, said in an emotional press conference that he  didn't blame his wife and urged women to get treatment if they think  they might have postpartum depression.He  previously told The Orange County Register that his wife was deeply  distraught because their son was diagnosed with congenital muscular  torticollis — a twisting of the neck to one side — and wore a helmet to  help correct his plagiocephaly, also known as flat-head syndrome.
He had been receiving treatment at Children's Hospital but did not have an appointment the day of the incident.
"My  wife was not in her five senses. She didn't know what she was doing,"  Medina said, choking back tears. "I don't know if many people know what  postpartum depression is, but in reality it is something very serious  and needs to be treated."Simmons said Hermosillo's behavior showed she intended to kill her son, regardless of her mental state.
"It's  not like she's in a fetal position when the police arrived," he said.  "She picks a specific location, drives to the top of the building (and)  takes the helmet off. I'm sure she's depressed, the post-partum blues,  I'm sure she had some of that."
"It's going to be up to a jury to decide if she had the wherewithal to inform the intent to kill."
Hermosillo's  arraignment has been postponed until Sept. 16. Orange County Superior  Court Judge Joe Perez set bail at $1 million, but federal immigration  officials have a no-bail hold to keep her in custody because she is in  the U.S. illegally, said Jim Amormino, sheriff's spokesman.
Hermosillo  was being held in the medical ward, where she is receiving a  psychological evaluation, he said. The Mexican national is being kept in  a cell by herself and wearing a protective gown so she can't injure  herself, he added.
The judge  appointed a public defender for Hermosillo. The attorney did not comment  after the hearing, which was conducted in a jailhouse courtroom and  relayed to spectators on a closed-circuit TV.
Farrah Emami, a spokeswoman for the Orange County district attorney's office, said prosecutors were not commenting on a motive.
"We're  not going to speculate at this point as to why she may have done it. I  don't think there will ever be a satisfactory answer as to why a mother  would do something like this to her child," she said.
A  witness on the ground saw the baby falling and several people,  including a doctor, called 911, said Sgt. Dan Adams, a spokesman for  Orange police.More...

 
 
 
 
 
 8/24/2011 10:12:00 PM
8/24/2011 10:12:00 PM
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