A teacher allegedly poisoned her son with his own fecal matter
Doctors
were puzzled when infections sickened a teenage boy, who was undergoing
chemotherapy at Riley Hospital for Children, in Indianapolis, during the fall.
The 15-year-old had been treated for leukemia in August, but bouts of severe
diarrhea, fever and vomiting forced him to return to the hospital in
September.
The
culprit was not cancer, though. Prosecutors at Marion County say that the
boy’s mother, a 41-year-old teacher named Tiffany Alberts of Wolcott,
Ind., had injected fecal matter into his IV line. She has been charged with
seven felony counts, including six counts of aggravated battery
and a count of neglect of a dependent,
Confusion
about his symptoms prompted a blood test, which revealed microbes in his
bloodstream associated with feces, WLFI-TV reported.
The hospital installed surveillance equipment in his hospital
room. Multiple times during the week of Nov. 13 — until Marion County
officers were called to the hospital Nov. 17 — Alberts could be seen on
video injecting a substance into the boy’s central
venous line, according to court documents obtained by
Fox 59.
Taken
to an Indiana Child Abuse Office, Alberts’s initial explanation was that
she had injected water to “flush” the line because “the medicine that was given
to him burned,” CNN reported.
She subsequently admitted to filling a needle with the 15-year-old’s feces,
from a bag she had stored in the bathroom of his hospital room. Doctors
told Fox 59 that the boy faced septic shock and now a possible fatal
delay in chemotherapy while the hospital treated his infection.
Her
motivation, according to court records reviewed by CNN, was to see her son
moved from the Riley Hospital intensive-care unit to another unit in the
hospital where “the treatment was better.” Alberts’s attorney, when contacted
by the Huffington Post, declined to
comment on ongoing cases.
Alberts
was released Wednesday on an $80,000 bond,
WHIO-TV reported, and she relocated to Ohio.
A pretrial hearing has been scheduled for January. As part of her release, the
judge decreed a no-contact order between Alberts and her son.
Strange
though it may seem, this was not the first time a mother had been accused of
sickening her child with fecal matter injected into an intravenous fluid bag.
In July
2015, a judge sentenced a West Virginia woman to six years in prison after she
admitted to injecting feces into her 9-year-old son’s IV. Her son was being
treated for a congenital disease that affected his bowels; the mother, Candida
Fluty, had hoped “doctors would take a different medical approach” if his
condition worsened, prosecutors said, according to
the Cincinnati Enquirer.

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