People who each paid up to $8 800 to adopt nine babies under an
illegal scheme in northern Mexico will be allowed to keep the children,
authorities said.
Authorities in the state of Sonora had detained
eight people on Tuesday accused of obtaining the children from a corrupt
official working in the child protection services of the prosecutor's
office.
They were among 14 adoptive parents sought in connection
with the case, which sparked national outrage. All eight were released
after posting bail the same day.
But Sonora state chief prosecutor
Carlos Navarro said they would all be able to keep the children,
including three who have been taken to social services.
"The
state prosecutor's office will drop legal action against the men and
women who have given these children the love and affection that all
children need," Navarro told a news conference late Wednesday.
"I think that these families have been punished enough already," he said.
Meanwhile,
none of the biological mothers have come forward, an official in the
prosecutor's office told AFP. They are believed to have given away their
babies because they were poor or addicted to drugs.
Authorities
issued an arrest warrant for Vladimir Arzate, the deputy director of the
child protection section of the prosecutor's office accused of asking
couples for money to speed up the adoption process.
An arrest
warrant was also issued against a doctor who signed fake birth documents
in which the adoptive parents appeared as the biological parents.
Since 2011, Arzate used information on parents seeking to adopt and vulnerable pregnant women for his scheme, prosecutors said.
There are no documents showing any agreements between the adoptive parents and the pregnant women.
Friday, September 04, 2015
Babies bought in Mexico to stay with adoptive parents
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