Lodi News-Sentinel

Decades after woman finds baby buried alive, the two reunite

- By Brittny Mejia

LOS ANGELES — In 1998, a jogger found a newborn baby buried alive in the foothills of Altadena, his umbilical cord still attached. The baby, not more than a few hours old, hovered near death.

For decades, Azita Milanian would wonder what happened to the boy after he recovered at a Pasadena hospital and was put up for adoption. This week, 20 years to the date of when she found him, the pair were reunited.

“I was waiting for you for 20 years,” a tearful Milanian said as she hugged Matthew Whitaker.

It was a reunion that came about in an unlikely way, after a friend’s mom wrote into the KIIS FM radio station explaining Whitaker’s story and asking for a 23andMe DNA kit so he could learn more about his ancestry.

Whitaker agreed to take the test and have the results revealed during the “On Air with Ryan Seacrest” program. When one of the show’s producers read a 1998 Los Angeles Times story of Milanian finding him, she decided to try and reunite them.

Ahead of the program’s taping Wednesday morning, Milanian waited anxiously in a nearby room, with a bag filled with clothes that she had brought for Whitaker. In the bag was a card, with an envelope reading, “Happy Birthday! Baby Christian Mountain Angel Mathew.”

When Milanian walked into the studio and saw Whitaker, she began to cry, sobbing into his shirt as he hugged her and called her an angel.

“Finally, all my dreams came true,” Milanian said. Many in the studio cried.

On the program, the Iranian immigrant shared the story of how she found Whitaker on a Saturday night when she had been invited to go dancing, but decided instead to go running.

One of her dogs, Tango, had stopped to smell and scratch at the dirt on the trail. Milanian went to investigat­e and saw two feet coming out of the ground. At first she thought it was an animal, but then she heard the infant cry.

When she started digging, she found Whitaker wrapped in a blue towel. She lifted him onto her arm and began digging the dirt from his nose and mouth.

“All I said to you (was), ‘Please don’t die. I will never leave you. I love you,’” she recounted, taking Whitaker’s hand in hers as she spoke. “I love you too,” Whitaker said. After she found him, Milanian dialed 911 but was disconnect­ed several times before she finally flagged down a motorist, who drove to the Los Angeles County Sheriff ’s Department station to tell deputies about the baby.

While she waited, Milanian said, she tried to comfort him.

“He grabbed my wrist and stopped crying,” Milanian said in a 1998 interview. “It was very emotional. What kind of sick human would do something like that? He still had his umbilical cord hanging from his stomach.”

Whitaker’s body temperatur­e had fallen to 80 degrees and when he arrived at the hospital he was immediatel­y treated for severe hypothermi­a. Doctors believed the baby’s size — he weighed 7 pounds, 12 ounces — enabled him to survive.

The baby showed remarkable recovery and, at the time, the neonatal medical director at Huntington Memorial Hospital called it “really almost a miracle.” Hospital nurses named him “Baby Christian.”

 ?? MYUNG J. CHUN/LOS ANGELES TIMES ?? Azita Milanian and Matthew Whitaker, 20, meet for the first time since she found him as a newborn abandoned in brush near a trail in Altadena 20 years ago. This day of the reunion also was Whitaker’s birthday and the day he was found — May 16, 1998.
MYUNG J. CHUN/LOS ANGELES TIMES Azita Milanian and Matthew Whitaker, 20, meet for the first time since she found him as a newborn abandoned in brush near a trail in Altadena 20 years ago. This day of the reunion also was Whitaker’s birthday and the day he was found — May 16, 1998.

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