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Her mother was at home at the time and saw as her daughter swallowed the coin battery that popped out of a remote control. Nineteen-month-old Ava-Kate Parsons has undergone 20 surgeries since she swallowed the battery March 10. The battery was removed about five hours after the parents arrived at the hospital, the complaint said. David Smith, who they say downplayed the dangers. Parents Cole Parsons and Courtney Thorne said in a lawsuit that Wolfson Children’s Hospital in Jacksonville should have taken out the lithium battery within two hours, which is recommended by poison control centers. They were trying to reach the North Rim of the Grand Canyon, which is closed for the winter.Ī Florida family sued a hospital for malpractice on Wednesday, saying their baby suffered severe burns because it took too long to remove a coin-sized battery that she swallowed. Klein, recounting her roughly 30-hour journey in an interview from her hospital bed in Utah, said the family realized too late Thursday that their GPS sent them onto forest roads covered in dense snow. I can’t let this happen,” Karen Klein told “Good Morning America” this week. My son needs his mother, my husband needs his wife. “I kept thinking, this isn’t how my life is supposed to end, no, no, no.
King said the birds were in an approved box designed to let them breathe.īut when it was delivered to King’s hair salon in the northeast Alabama city of Grant, King said the postmaster told her, “well, your birds arrived, but they’re not alive.”Ī Pennsylvania woman who walked 26 miles through the snowy Arizona backcountry for help after her family’s car got stuck said she survived by eating twigs and snow and a desire to rescue her stranded husband and 10-year-old son. Rhonda King said the box containing the birds was marked with tire tracks when it arrived from Texas earlier this month. Postal Service officials said they’ve apologized to an Alabama woman who said her package of six live canaries arrived, but the birds were crushed and dead. The Daily Tribune News reports that Brianne Griffith was visiting her grandparents’ home in White, Georgia, on Christmas Day and playing on the rock in the backyard when it rolled onto her.īartow County EMS spokesman Brad Cothran said her right ankle was trapped beneath the boulder.
But the district attorney currently overseeing the case has said it was premature to exonerate the Ramseys and ordered additional tests using new DNA testing technology that authorities hope will further the investigation.Īuthorities said it took the strength of a half-dozen people and a pulley system to move a 1,500-pound boulder after the massive rock rolled onto a 15-year-old South Carolina girl, pinning her. A prosecutor cleared her parents and brother in 2008 based on DNA evidence. The beauty pageant star was found dead in the basement of her family’s home in Boulder, Colorado, the day after Christmas in 1996. The series, called “The Case of JonBenet Ramsey,” aired in September ahead of the 20th anniversary of JonBenet’s death.
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In the lawsuit filed Wednesday, Burke Ramsey claims that the network, its production company and the experts interviewed in the series on the unsolved murder conspired to defame him for publicity and profit. The older brother of JonBenet Ramsey is suing CBS and others for $750 million, saying his reputation was ruined after a television series that concluded he killed his 6-year-old sister two decades ago.