The newborn girl was only spotted by a doctor crying in the rain and is now fighting for her life after being rushed inside. A mum whose baby had been born with Down's Syndrome dumped the tiny tot outside a hospital naked. The newborn girl was only spotted by a doctor crying in the rain is now fighting for her life after being rushed inside. She is wearing a long coat with a hood in a bid to hide her identity, before bending down and leaving the tiny girl alone on the floor. The cameras also recorded doctor Zhalgas Usenhanov racing inside with the naked girl after he found her at the hospital in Shymkent in Kazakhstan.
Sinclair, 41, who ran a DJ and karaoke business, had taken part in events organised for people with learning difficulties. He earlier denied three sex charges during a trial at the High Court in Edinburgh, but was convicted of inducing the woman, who was incapable of giving consent, to take part in sexual activity by getting her to take off her clothes and get into a bed. He was found guilty of sexually assaulting the man, who was also incapable of giving consent, by kissing him, touching him and carrying out an oral rape on him. Sinclair was also found guilty of sexually assaulting the woman by touching her private parts during the offending at an address in Morayshire in August
Desperate mum dumps naked newborn outside hospital after she is born with Down's Syndrome
By Daniel Miller. The parents of an 'affectionate' year-old woman with Down's syndrome have been forbidden from having her sterilised despite their concerns she could fall pregnant. In a landmark ruling at the Court of Protection in London, Mr Justice Cobb concluded that such a procedure would be 'disproportionate'. Landmark ruling: Mr Justice Cobb, sitting at the Court of Protection in London, concluded that sterilisation would be 'disproportionate'. The parents feared their daughter, who does not have a boyfriend and had expressed no interest in having one, could easily be taken advantage of.
The sexual development of one child with Down syndrome is detailed from his infancy through his adolescence. This paper confronts society's often held notion that a person labeled with mental retardation is asexual, amoral, or immoral, and incapable of learning how to make reasoned decisions about his own sexual behavior. It is written by and from the perspective of his mother, a disabled disability advocate and a former special education teacher, but includes references to others who have had an impact on the choices that might have affected his sexual development. Her son is quoted both from notes she has taken throughout his life and his memories in response to hearing the draft of this article read aloud at the age of nearly nineteen. As the single, adoptive parent of an adult child labeled with Down syndrome, I have noted since his infancy that friends, family, and society have questioned his right and capability to be a sexual being.