Fairbanks

Officials take DNA sample in search for family of Fairbanks baby found abandoned in cardboard box

Officials said Tuesday that they are still attempting to identify a newborn who was found abandoned in a cardboard box on a street corner in Fairbanks in frigid conditions on New Year’s Eve.

The child, known as Teshawn, continues to be in good health and in the care of the Office of Children’s Services, Alaska State Troopers said in a statement.

Troopers have taken a DNA sample and will submit it to a database as part of the ongoing effort to determine immediate family, the statement said.

Troopers have said they were notified about the abandoned baby Friday afternoon, when the wind chill factor was reported at minus 12.

A woman posted on social media that she found the baby. The post included included a video that showed a baby swaddled in a box and a note.

The note, written from the child’s perspective, said, “Please help me!!!”

The note indicated the child was born at 6 a.m. Friday, but added that the baby’s mother and grandparents didn’t have food or money to provide care. The woman who made the social media post said she had found the baby by a row of mailboxes near her house.

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The note found with the infant also said the child’s parents lived on a certain street in Fairbanks, but troopers on Tuesday said it’s entirely possible that the baby came “from a different location in the Fairbanks area.”

Alaska has a so-called safe haven law that allows parents to legally surrender an infant under certain conditions, such as leaving the baby in the physical custody of someone such as a peace officer, doctor, hospital employee or firefighter or with someone they believe would provide appropriate care. The law applies to babies younger than 21 days old.

Mark Thiessen, Associated Press

Mark Thiessen is a reporter for the Associated Press based in Anchorage.

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