El Dorado News-Times

Inside News

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A suburban Detroit fire chief said Wednesday that he still can’t explain why a 20-year-old woman declared dead at her home was discovered alive hours later at a funeral home.

SOUTHFIELD, Mich. — A suburban Detroit fire chief said Wednesday that he still can’t explain why a 20-year-old woman declared dead at her home was discovered alive hours later at a funeral home.

An emergency medical crew did not “detect signs of life,” despite immediatel­y attempting to revive Timesha Beauchamp and twice more returning to her room when relatives said she appeared to be breathing or had a heartbeat, Southfield Chief Johnny Menifee said.

“We, too, share in their anguish,” Menifee said of Beauchamp’s family. “We know that they want answers. We’re trying to provide those answers but it takes time. We want to get it right, and we want to do it right.”

Menifee took questions from reporters for the first time since the bizarre events Sunday. Beauchamp, meanwhile, remained in critical condition at a hospital.

Staff at a Detroit funeral home discovered she was alive just before she was to be embalmed, said Geoffrey Fieger, an attorney for Beauchamp’s family.

Beauchamp was born with cerebral palsy and has always needed constant medical care, Fieger said.

Menifee suggested it might be a case of “Lazarus syndrome,” a reference to people who come back to life without assistance after attempts to resuscitat­e have failed.

“These things have happened in the past,”

Menifee said.

Beauchamp’s family called 911 because she was unconsciou­s and not breathing. Two Southfield firefighte­rs who are parademics and two more firefighte­rs who are emergency medical technician­s responded. The emergency crew later called a doctor at a hospital who declared Beauchamp dead based on informatio­n provided at the scene.

Asked why Beauchamp was never taken to a hospital, Menifee said “that’s all under investigat­ion.”

The firefighte­rs are on paid leave while the case is investigat­ed by the city.

“They feel terrible,” Menifee said.

“These are good firefighte­rs. I know the family’s hurting. These firefighte­rs are hurting also,” the chief said. “We want to have these answers, and we plan to get these answers.”

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 ?? (Courtesy Erica Lattimore through Fieger Law via AP) ?? In this family photo, Timesha Beauchamp is seen with her brother Steven Thompson in Southfield, Mich.
(Courtesy Erica Lattimore through Fieger Law via AP) In this family photo, Timesha Beauchamp is seen with her brother Steven Thompson in Southfield, Mich.

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