Mother charged four years later after abandoning her newborn child in the woods after sealing her in a plastic bag

Police caught the mother, who is currently being imprisoned on numerous criminal counts, including attempted murder, nearly four years after a newborn kid was put in a yellow shopping bag, dropped “like a bag of trash” into the woods, and left there to perish.

In 2019, a family heard Baby India’s cries in the bushes adjacent to their home and rescued her from being abandoned in a tied bag with her umbilical chord still attached and covered in placenta and blood.

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At 8:30 p.m. on a scorching June day in Cummings, Georgia, Alan Ragatz and his four children arrived at their home. Alan was set to lock the doors and put on the air conditioning as he got ready for bed when his three teenage children claimed to have heard a “strange cry” emanating from the woods surrounding their home.

According to Ragatz’s daughter, “Dad, we hear a baby.” The daughters were confused by the noises and refused to believe it was an animal, so they grabbed a few flashlights and followed the screaming. They quickly returned, pleading with their father to go along.

“You would hear it and then it would muffle up, and as we walked down it got a little more clear,” he claimed.

The family then made a tragic discovery.

“We found a, looked like a bathmat that was all wrapped up, and by the time we got to it and opened the bathmat, it was a little baby, in (what) looked like a Publix bag tied,” Ragatz said of the baby who had been put on a pile of sticks and leaves coated in blood. She still had a portion of the placenta and the umbilical cord.

Kayla, one of the daughters, told Alan and her siblings that it was “terrifying” and “scary,” and they reacted with horror and tears.

“Once we found her, my girls were in shock, it was an emotional deal, and everyone was upset,” remarked Ragatz, referring to the infant as a “fighter.” “We don’t judge whoever committed this. Although there are social problems, there are better solutions.

In response to a 911 call, Forsyth County officials found the infant, who was still very much alive.

According to sheriff Ron Freeman, the baby girl known as India was born at full term and is believed to have been born the day before she was found.

The baby was crying and holding onto a policeman’s finger while the bag was being torn apart on the shocking bodycam video that the police instantly started searching for the person who had abandoned the newborn.

Police at the time had no knowledge about India’s mother or her ancestry. Sharing the video was done in the hopes that it would offer some explanation and “credible information on the identity of Baby India and to show how important it is to find closure in this case,” as well as to “show how important it is to find closure in this case.”

Later, Forsyth County stated that Baby India was “thriving and is in the care of the Georgia Department of Family and Children Services,” despite the fact that thousands of people from all over the world had contacted them to express their desire to adopt the child.

Sheriff Freeman observed that “it’s amazing the number of people who are looking to add a new life into their families, and we got somebody who tried to throw one away.”

According to police, Karima Jawani, 40, of Atlanta, was arrested in May 2023 after a fervent hunt for information about Baby India’s identity.

During a press conference, Freeman addressed the media and said, “Four years ago, I said in this room, and I told you, we will bring this individual to justice…

I didn’t anticipate it taking four years.Investigators made a considerable progress, according to Freeman, when “advanced DNA practices” helped to identify Baby India’s biological father.

Detectives had to work out who had left the baby in the woods after it was finished. The statement states that the evidence “indicates the baby was born in the car and driven for a “significant length of time” by the suspect, Jiwani, who made “no effort to leave this child” in a location where she could be found.”

Jiwani has a “history of hidden and concealed pregnancies and surprise births,” according to family and friends, according to Freeman, who also said there is no evidence the father was aware of the pregnancy or the baby’s abandonment.

“Like a sack of trash, this kid was tied up and dumped into the woods in a plastic bag. I’m at a loss for words,” Freeman added. It is genuinely among the saddest things I have ever witnessed.

Jiwani is being jailed without bond and faces charges of severe assault, first-degree child maltreatment, attempted murder criminally, and reckless abandonment. Freeman underlined the legal options available to parents who are unable or unwilling to care for an infant.

The Safe-Haven Act, also known as the infant Moses law in some jurisdictions, allows a mother to secretly leave her newborn infant, who is under 30 days old, in a hospital, fire station, or police station without being subject to any legal consequences.

According to the National Safe Haven Alliance, the group saved 33 newborns who had been forcibly abandoned in 2021, but 22 of the infants were later found dead.

“When a biological parent wouldn’t do what they’re supposed to do, Forsyth County surrounded this little girl with love, care, and prayers and lifted her up the way it’s supposed to be,” said Freeman, who also stated that Baby India is now “happy, healthy, and in a safe place.”

 

We should thank the Ragatz family for their assistance in locating Baby India and saving her life. We are happy to see Karima Jiwani being held accountable for what she did since it is disgusting for a mother to abandon her innocent child in such a way.

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