I don't think a 3 yr old child should ever be taken from the only home they have ever known. Talk about early childhood trauma. I can't imagine.
The authorities responsible for overseeing adoptions should have remedied this early on. If the man truly was fighting for the baby right from the get go then the baby should have been returned.
But not now.
And if you allow that you will have babies stolen, because if you keep them long enough its your's anyway. NO the child needs to be returned to the father and the adoption agency charged and banned from doing any more adoptions. Remember that 6 year old stolen from her mother after the kidnapper set fire to the house would you have had that child remain with the kidnapper?
PHILADELPHIA -- The mother of a Philadelphia girl who was thought to have died in a house fire in 1997 is eagerly awaiting a reunion with her daughter.
Delimar Vera was just 10 days old when the fire destroyed her family's home in the Feltonville section of North Philadelphia on Dec. 15, 1997. Although a body was never found, authorities believed the infant had been consumed by the heat and flames of the fast-moving blaze.
But not everything added up, according to state Rep. Angel Cruz. Cruz said a woman had come to the house twice on the day of the fire, and left once with the baby's father, Pedro Vera.
Now, police say, it turns out that the infant was actually kidnapped by a woman who set the blaze to cover her tracks.
In January, the girl's mother, Luz Aida Cuevas, contacted police after spotting the now-6-year-old girl at a birthday party thrown by Vera's side of the family and recognizing the child as her own.
"I looked at her. She walked in front of me. She looked at me. I looked at her. I said to my sister, 'That is my daughter. She got my daughter.' My sister said, 'You have to take it easy. You need proof. We have to find proof,'" Cuevas said.
Luz Cuevas told The Associated Press Tuesday that she recognized the girl and was certain that it was her daughter, Delimar Vera. She says she pretended that the little girl had chewing gum stuck in her hair to remove five strands from the child's head.
She folded them in a napkin and placed them in a plastic bag, which she locked in a safe at home, then turned over to authorities. Cuevas says she knew from watching television that they would need hair for DNA tests.
"She bumps into the lady who had come to her house the day of the fire, and she sees the lady with a child, and all of a sudden, her motherly instincts say, 'that's my child.' She left there saying, 'that's my child, that's my baby," Rep. Cruz said.
The investigation was reopened and the DNA test results announced Monday confirmed that the girl Cuevas saw is her missing daughter.
Delimar has been placed in the custody of New Jersey Division of Youth and Family Services. It is not clear when she will be reunited with her biological mother, but Cuevas knows how she will greet her daughter.
She said that she will "go and give her a kiss and a hug and say, 'I love you, I love you."'
Police have issued a warrant for the arrest of 41-year-old Carolyn Correa of Willingboro, N.J., on charges of arson, kidnapping and conspiracy. She remains at large.
She was last seen living in Willingboro, N.J., driving a burgundy 2003 Chevrolet with a New Jersey license plate of NTL71H.
Birth Mother Talks To WCAU-TV
Philadelphia TV station WCAU-TV talked exclusively to Cuevas about her relief at finally finding her daughter.
"I screamed (when I was told the test results). I felt so happy. I don't know what to say. Cry? You know, because I was in shock when they say, 'It's your daughter,'" Cuevas said happily.
Cuevas said she knew she had just met her daughter because she recognized the moles on the girl's cheek. She also said the girl looked like her sons, who never gave up hope they would be reunited with their sister.
"Every Christmas, my sons say, 'Mommy, we have to find (her).' I said, 'Don't worry, we'll find her.' I knew she was alive," Cuevas said.
Cuevas is thrilled, but she also has bitter questions for the woman accused of kidnapping her child.
"Why'd she do that to me? Kidnapping my daughter? You know? She do a fire to my house to take my daughter," Cuevas said.
Correa's husband told WCAU that he is devastated to find out the girl he thought was his daughter belonged to someone else.
Girl's Birth Father Says He's Stunned
Pedro Vera said was stunned and excited that his daughter was alive and revisited the address where he last saw her. He told WCAU-TV that he couldn't wait to see his daughter.
Vera went to the same birthday party where Cuevas first laid eyes on Delimar. Correa is his cousin and introduced the girl to him as her own daughter, named Aaliyah.
"I got the feeling that was my daughter because she looked like me," Vera said.
Vera also had the feeling that the girl looked just like his son.
"A lot of years, I think she's dead. And now, when I looked at her and I said, 'Oh my God, that's my daughter. She's not dead,'" Vera told WCAU.