- Study Says Most Parents Don’t Use Car Seats In Ride Share Vehicles Like Uber
- This 12-Year-Old Boy Is A Sophomore Aerospace Engineering Major!
- Fire Safety Experts Warn Of Hand Sanitizer Danger After A Mom and Kids Escape House Fire
- Recall Alert: Peaches May Be The Cause Of Salmonella Outbreak, 68 People Ill
- Summer Vacation In The Days Of COVID: Tips To Stay Safe
- How To Safely Grocery Shop During The Coronavirus Pandemic
- Michigan Teen With Vape-Related Illness Undergoes Double Lung Transplant
- Teen Kicks Off Anti-Vaping Campaign From Hospital Bed
- Teenager Receives Life Sentence For Strangling Sister To Death Over A Wi-Fi Password
- Toddler Falls To Death From 11th Deck of Cruise Ship
Toddler Injured After Falling 10 Ft. Inside Society Hill Restaurant
A toddler has been hospitalized after a fall inside a Society hill restaurant in Philadelphia on Saturday night.
The incident happened around 8 p.m. inside Pietro’s Coal Oven Pizzeria at 121 South Street.
Authorities say that the 16-month-old male fell about ten feet from the second level onto the first level.
He was taken to Children’s Hospital for treatment and has been listed in stable condition.
Police are still investigating the incident.
Woman Makes Shocking Confession About Putting Four Newborns In Concrete-Filled Buckets
A woman from Japan was arrested after police say she confessed to putting four newborns in concrete-filled buckets two decades ago and having been filled with guilt over not caring for her babies.
Human remains were found in four buckets found in her condominium, an Osaka police official said, requesting anonymity due to department policy.
Mayumi Saito, 53, was arrested this week on charges of abandoning bodies, a day after she turned herself in at the police station.
Saito was quoted by police saying that she put the bodies into concrete from 1992 through 1997 because she had been too poor to raise them – but she had been filled with guilt over the years.
Saito had a part-time job, but details of her work, family and comments are not available.
The causes of the babies’ deaths were unclear.
It is quite standard in Japan for criminal charges to be added later as an investigation progresses.
Although Japan is the world’s third-largest economy and has a reputation for being economically advanced, poverty remains a problem, especially among women.
Social support such as affordable daycare is lacking for Mothers to work while child-rearing, as well as to get counselling and other help to cope with parenting duties and mental stress.
Japanese media reports quote the woman as saying she had no one to talk to or turn to.
0 comments