Boston Herald

Toddler rescued at Mass & Cass

Council president calls for investigat­ion

- By Gayla Cawley gcawley@bostonhera­ld.com

City Council President Ed Flynn is calling for the Boston Public Health Commission to conduct an investigat­ion, after authoritie­s discovered a 2-year-old boy spent a night in the violent, drug-ridden Mass and Cass zone.

The toddler was seen inside a car parked in a lot on Massachuse­tts Avenue last Thursday night, with his mother asleep behind the wheel, but it wasn’t until past 8 a.m. the following morning that a street outreach worker alerted authoritie­s about a woman with a “baby” on Southampto­n Street, a Boston Police report states.

Southampto­n and its surroundin­g areas, the report notes, “are known for the avid use of drugs, illegal drug sales, human traffickin­g and violence.”

“I think it’s a troubling developmen­t,” Flynn told the Herald yesterday. “I want to first acknowledg­e the profession­alism of our first responders, but having a child in the Mass and Cass zone is horrific, and it’s certainly child endangerme­nt.”

Flynn sent an email to Dr. Bisola Ojikuto, executive director of the Boston Public Health Commission, last night, requesting an investigat­ion into the matter, to determine how long and how often the child has been there.

He also wants to know whether this was an isolated incident or if other children have been found in the area, including underneath the tents on Atkinson Street.

The BPHC deferred comment to the Department of Children and Families, which has taken custody of the child, and to the report provided by Boston Police. A spokespers­on for DCF said it has received a 51A child abuse or neglect form for the incident, and “is investigat­ing.”

According to the police report, the 34-year-old woman stated she was on Southampto­n Street last Friday morning because her car was towed from a McDonald’s parking lot, at 870 Mass. Ave., the night before.

The woman claimed to have spent much of the night with her son at Boston Medical Center, to stay warm and charge her phone.

She said she left the hospital at approximat­ely 6:30 a.m., and headed toward Topeka Street to get “dosed” at a methadone clinic, the Boston Comprehens­ive Treatment Center, the report states.

Police were informed by security officers, however, that the woman was seen on Atkinson Street last Thursday night, “pushing a stroller with a baby inside of it.” She was also seen at the nearby Alltown gas station, “nodding off” by a gas tank the following morning, at 7:35 a.m., with her child present, the report states.

Officers had also been alerted to a woman who was apparently asleep behind the wheel of her car in the McDonald’s parking lot shortly after 9:30 p.m. Thursday. Her car was towed for an expired registrati­on, the report states.

It wasn’t until past 8 a.m. the following morning that the woman and toddler’s presence at Mass and Cass was called into authoritie­s by a street outreach worker, the report states.

Tania Del Rio, the city’s Mass and Cass coordinato­r, said at ayesterday’s Council hearing that the incident was called in “as soon as staff laid eyes on the child.” He spent the night there, she said.

The woman was questioned by police and a fire lieutenant in front of the nearby fire department headquarte­rs on Southampto­n Street. She had previously been accompanie­d by a man “who was under the influence of an unknown substance,” Fire Lt. Gary Cullinane told officers.

The man, identified as the boy’s father, was not on scene when police arrived. Albert Giannini, 37, was later arrested on two active warrants, charging him with operating under the influence of a controlled substance and possession of a Class A drug, a category that includes heroin, cocaine, ecstasy and LSD.

At the time of the interview, police and fire personnel noted how cold it was. The toddler was wearing only a single layer, despite the temperatur­e being between 40 and 45 degrees, the report states.

Due to the inconsiste­ncies in the woman’s story, police could not confirm if the child had “spent the night in adequate shelter,” the report states.

“It is very disturbing to me that a child was exposed to the unsafe and unhealthy environmen­t on Atkinson Street for an extended period of time before authoritie­s knew and stepped in to remove them,” City Councilor Erin Murphy told the Herald. “It highlights the public health and safety emergency that has been happening in the area for a very long time now.”

Flynn said Atkinson Street was “festered with mice and rats” when he and Murphy walked through the area two weeks ago to get to the Southampto­n Street shelter, and he was “troubled by the open-air drug market and drug use in public.”

There are “stabbings, shootings, drug dealings, rapes and sex traffickin­g happening all the time and it needs to come to an end,” Murphy added.

“We can no longer ignore it and we need to use all of our public health and first responder supports to stop another child from being down on Mass and Cass,” she said.

 ?? MATT STONE — BOSTON HERALD ?? A man pushes luggage down Atkinson Street. Now officials say a child was taken off the Mile.
MATT STONE — BOSTON HERALD A man pushes luggage down Atkinson Street. Now officials say a child was taken off the Mile.

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