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| 2014/05/24 09:37:07瀏覽59|回應0|推薦0 | |
| Heflin, now 45, was at his job with a cable company on Nov. 4, 1995. The temperature, he said, was 20 below with wind chill factored in. He said it was so cold that morning that he had layered on several coats. Heflin, who was also a volunteer firefighter, took to his car to warm up. “While I was sitting in the truck getting warm, I was listening to my scanner,” he said. Heflin heard dispatch say an anonymous female had called in saying she had left a newborn baby at a cemetery near a pine tree. “Ten minutes passed, and they could not locate the infant,” he remembered. Heflin stold ABC News how his gut told him to search a nearby cemetery. “I pulled up in front of the cemetery. There was a large pine tree,” Heflin said. “There was about a foot of snow on the ground. There were footprints all over the area so it looked like somebody had been there. I couldn’t find anything. I walked around the pine tree a couple of times and I didn’t see anything.” Heflin walked back to his truck but said something told him to go back and check one more time. “As I approached the tree, I heard a baby whimper. I thought, ‘Oh, she’s here.’” Heflin said Skyler was wrapped in a plaid Raggedy Anne blanket. The day-old infant still had mucus on her and her umbilical cord that was tied off with a shoe string. He immediately wiped pine leaves off her and wrapped her in his winter overcoat and pressed her up against his volunteer fire fighter fleece to warm her up. “I called it in and handed her to the ambulance and that was the last time I saw her,” Heflin said. Five days later, Bonnie and Greg James took in the foster child and eventually adopted the girl, naming her Skyler filtered and tossed to the wind On your to-do-list add forgiveness 據說此笑話深受女士的喜愛 錯過護他安好 refuse extensivemess. |
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