Inland Valley Daily Bulletin

Details released in case of child stealing

Attorney: Fake nurse was in hospital 45 minutes handling newborns

- By Brian Rokos brokos@scng.com

A woman accused of posing as a nurse and kidnapping two newborns at a Moreno Valley hospital spent at least 45 minutes inside, including 20 minutes in one patient’s room where she twice changed the baby’s diaper, and even had a conversati­on with a real nurse without being detected by employees, according to the attorney for one of the victims and a document filed in the criminal case.

Jesenea Miron, 23, has pleaded not guilty to two counts of kidnapping and two counts of child stealing along with sentencing enhancemen­ts of depriving a parent of a child. Miron is due back in court on Sept. 14 and is being held without bail.

Miron left the two babies behind before fleeing. She was arrested later that day, July 14.

Paul Maineri is representi­ng a woman who entered Riverside University Health System Medical Center on July 13 and gave birth to her first child that day. Maineri, at a news conference at his office in Murrieta on Thursday, said Miron entered the woman’s room and spent 20 minutes in there, at one point changing the baby’s diaper.

Miron left but came back 25 minutes later and changed the diaper again, Maineri said.

Then, according to the Riverside County District Attorney’s Office’s written opposition to a defense request to lower Miron’s $1 million bail, Miron asked the father to hand over the baby, which he did. Miron placed the baby in a bassinet and told the parents she needed to take the baby for a CT scan. The father insisted on going with her. Miron wheeled the baby away but when she was halfway out the door, she turned around and said she was going to check on the availabili­ty of the CT scan machine. She walked away and never returned, the document states.

That same day, the document continues, Miron went into the room of a patient who had given birth three days earlier. The mother saw Miron talking to a nurse whom the mother recognized. Miron was then allowed to go back into the room and talked to the mother about the baby.

When the mother said the baby needed physical therapy on a shoulder, Miron picked up the baby, said she worked in physical therapy at the hospital and offered to take the baby downstairs for treatment. But the mother felt uneasy handing over her newborn because the baby had been discharged and the tracking bracelet had been removed.

Miron returned the baby to the mother and left the hospital. She was arrested that day in Moreno Valley.

“The defendant was able to undermine the security protocols set for by the hospital,” the document states. “But for the parents being vigilant, the defendant would have been successful in taking either infant out of the hospital. While the hospital has safety protocols for infants such as GPS systems, both infants had been discharged and the GPS tags had been removed.”

In a different court document, Miron was quoted by investigat­ors as saying stealing a baby would be “easy.”

Maineri said Miron fooled hospital staff through a combinatio­n of her disguise — scrubs and a fake identifica­tion — and inattentio­n from the staff. He

 ?? PHOTOS BY WATCHARA PHOMICINDA — STAFF PHOTOGRAPH­ER ?? Attorney Paul Maineri, right, who represents one of two families whose newborn was allegedly kidnapped briefly July 14at Riverside University Health System Medical Center in Moreno Valley, speaks during a news conference at his office Thursday. Maineri said the suspect, Jesenea Miron, entered his client’s room and changed the child’s diaper twice.
PHOTOS BY WATCHARA PHOMICINDA — STAFF PHOTOGRAPH­ER Attorney Paul Maineri, right, who represents one of two families whose newborn was allegedly kidnapped briefly July 14at Riverside University Health System Medical Center in Moreno Valley, speaks during a news conference at his office Thursday. Maineri said the suspect, Jesenea Miron, entered his client’s room and changed the child’s diaper twice.
 ?? ?? Maineri said Miron fooled hospital staff through a disguise — scrubs and a fake ID — and staff inattentio­n. He would not say whether he planned to seek compensati­on from the hospital.
Maineri said Miron fooled hospital staff through a disguise — scrubs and a fake ID — and staff inattentio­n. He would not say whether he planned to seek compensati­on from the hospital.

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