(Live Action) One New Jersey baby girl’s birth certificate is going to list a unique location for place of birth: a New Jersey train station. The little girl was born on July 17, 2020, around 10:00 am in a bathroom stall at Newark’s busy Penn Station.
A bodycam video of a New Jersey transit officer shows the remarkable series of events following the girl’s birth:
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The jaw-dropping video opens with several officers approaching the little girl’s mother, who is standing in a bathroom stall. At first, the officer radios to someone, “It’s not a baby,” apparently thinking that the mother had not yet given birth. However, the woman then says something (redacted for privacy), and shows the officers a newborn wrapped in some kind of blanket or jacket, to which the surprised officer responds with an expletive.
According to the video narration, the baby girl was “unresponsive, not breathing and grayish in color.”
Officer Bryan Richards, who was previously an EMT, immediately took the girl to the closest sink and began chest compressions. Officer Richards initially called for emergency personnel, but quickly changed his mind, deciding to transport the baby to a nearby hospital himself.
With sirens blaring, Officer Alberto Nunes drives to the hospital while Officer Richards continues CPR in the passenger seat, working to clear amniotic fluid out of her airway. Clearly, Officer Nunes was hurrying, because at one point Officer Richards can be heard saying, “Don’t kill me, Nunes!” It appears that the newborn finally started breathing while in transit to the hospital, because Officer Richards then says, “There we go. Good girl.”
Tweet This: “There we go. Good girl” - OFC Bryan Richards, to the newborn baby girl he revived after she was born in a train station bathroom
Just as they arrive at the hospital, the baby finally starts crying. The video closes with Officer Richards carrying the crying baby through the doors of the emergency room at the hospital. According to news reports, the baby girl and her mother are now “doing well.”
Editor's note: This article was published at Live Action News and is reprinted with permission.