Woman awarded custody a day after her daughter is poisoned

A child in Quintana Roo died last week from injuries sustained from the ingestion of hydrochloric acid just a day before her mother won back custody of her.

Kimberly Berenice Chi Bautista, 8, died on Tuesday, February 18 from septic shock and acid burns on her esophagus.

Authorities in Cancún are looking for the girl’s father, identified as José Chi, and stepmother, whose identity has not been released. The latter is believed to have forced Kimberly to drink the poisonous substance. Both are considered fugitives.

The girl’s mother, Rocío del Carmen Bautista Maldonado, says that Chi abandoned her and Kimberly to go live with another woman. He later filed for custody, and Bautista lost guardianship of her daughter in June of last year.

She had been petitioning the courts to win back custody since then, and was finally awarded it the day after her daughter was pronounced dead. She was made aware of the girl’s death when she went to pick her up from state authorities.

Bautista accused the girl’s father of being responsible for her death. Kimberly’s body showed several signs of physical abuse, and neighbors had told Bautista that they were aware of the girl being beaten continually.

She also claimed that her complaints against Chi had not been processed earlier due to corruption and nepotism in his favor within the state Attorney General’s Office.

Sources: El Financiero (sp), Diario de Yucatán (sp)

Have something to say? Paid Subscribers get all access to make & read comments.

National Guard arrests truck driver hauling 66,000 liters of illegal fuel

0
Fuel theft has long been a problem in Mexico, including in México state and the Red Triangle region of the neighboring state of Puebla. The Sheinbaum administration is making strides to put an end to the dangerous business.

A win for whales in their suit against huge vessels in the Gulf of California

0
The novel lawsuit, with Gulf of California whales serving as the plaintiffs, is based on the principle that whales are equally entitled to a safe and liveable habitat as human beings.

300-kg crocodile alarms bathers at Puerto Escondido’s Bacocho Beach

1
The croc may have been wandering after being displaced from its usual home, a phenomenon that has led to increasing out-of-place crocodile spottings along the Jalisco and Oaxaca coasts.
BETA Version - Powered by Perplexity