• Font Size    
Advertising
E-mail

Close Window E-mail This Page

Aunt Wants Abandoned Baby's Father To Surrender

Required fields are marked with an asterisk(*)



The information you provide will be used only to send the requested e-mail and will not be used to send any other e-mail communications. Read more in our Privacy Policy

Send E-mail

   Print     Share +    Comments

Aunt Wants Abandoned Baby's Father To Surrender

Issues Plea At Queens Fire House

NEW YORK (AP) ― The aunt of a baby girl abandoned at a Queens firehouse called on her brother, the child's father, to surrender to police.

"Carlos, if you see me, please turn yourself in," Maria Siavichay pleaded to her brother, Carlos Rodas, at a news conference on Monday. "It's the best thing you can do."

Rodas, 27, could face a statutory rape charge because the baby was born to a 14-year-old girl, police said. The mother probably would not be charged.

Livery cab driver Klever Sailema was hailed as a hero after he took the baby to a Queens firehouse on Thursday and said an unknown man had left her in his cab and disappeared.

But actually Sailema was in on the plan to get rid of the baby. He was arrested for lying about why he took the baby girl to the firehouse.

At the news conference on Monday, Sailema sought to apologize and defend himself, hoping to get prosecutors to drop the charges against him.

He said he felt he was saving the 6-month-old girl, Daniella, from a harsher fate and was trying to protect his new girlfriend from questions about her immigration status.

"Everything was falling on my responsibility, on my shoulders," Sailema said. "I only thought about the child." The baby's father told Siavichay, who also has been charged, that he couldn't cope with the child; she, in turn, asked Sailema to take the little girl to the firehouse.

The city has a safe haven law, which allows for newborns up to 5 days old to be left at a firehouse, church, hospital or other safe place, no questions asked.

Fernando Mateo, a cab drivers' advocate who is championing Sailema's cause, said Sailema had no idea that Daniella was too old to qualify for the no-questions treatment.

"Instead of not asking questions, as the safe haven law is advertised, they (the firefighters) called the police," Mateo said.

Sailema, who's from Ecuador, apologized Monday "for making up something that didn't exist."

"My only purpose was doing the right thing," he said in Spanish. "Unfortunately I did not do the right thing." Mateo, who at times translated for Sailema and at times spoke on his own, said Sailema told his story because, "If he said Maria gave him the child, then the cops were going to look for Maria. He didn't want to hurt Maria. He took the whole burden onto himself."

Mateo said Siavichay also is from Ecuador and is in the U.S. illegally.

Sailema said he also thought about his own two daughters, left behind in Ecuador.

"At that moment, I thought that I also had a child," he said. "What if my daughter was in this situation?"

Mateo said he met earlier Monday with Queens District Attorney Richard Brown and suggested the charges should be dropped. Sailema and Siavichay's defense attorney, Kevin Faga, said they would fight the charges if the case went to trial, but he said dropping the charges would be more just.

"Please don't lose sight of the fact that we have a healthy child," he said. "No harm has come to the child."

Sailema is charged with falsely reporting an incident and criminal facilitation. His 21-year-old girlfriend is charged with criminal facilitation.

Brown said he would "take all the facts into consideration," his spokesman Kevin Ryan said.

Mayor Michael Bloomberg, at an appearance in Jacksonville, Fla., said of Sailema, "I think common sense says that he was trying to do the right thing." But he added that the city's Administration for Children's Services has programs to help with cases like Daniella's.

An agency spokeswoman said temporary foster care, counseling and adoption are among the options. Mateo said Sailema was unaware of those programs.

The baby's mother, whose name has not been made public, is in the custody of the Administration for Children's Services, Bronx prosecutors said.

Siavichay said the baby's mother had left days before and her brother wanted to keep the baby but couldn't because he had to work.

Sailema told of an emotional cab ride, with the baby's father hugging and kissing the baby and then saying, "I'm sorry, there's nothing more I can do for you," before getting out of the car at his construction site.

Then Siavichay, fearful of immigration questions, also got out, crying while hugging and kissing the little girl.

(© 2010 The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.)

Add Comment

here. here. Need a log in? Register here
  •  * Will not be displayed with comment
  •  * e.g. (http://www.mywebsite.com)
  •  
  • Click here to refresh with new letters

Close Window Login


Close Window Flag Comment


loading...
You need the latest Flash player to view video content.
Click here to download.

Click here to bypass this detection if you already have the latest Flash Player.