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Left to die in a suburban Chicago garbage can as a newborn, man now seeks justice
Sean McDonnell was first given the name John Winters Doe. He was found abandoned outside an Arlington Heights apartment complex on a cold day in 1983. Sean was just hours old when he was left inside a dirty garbage dumpster to die.
“I was a mistake that wasn’t supposed to be here,” said Sean. “I was somebody’s unwanted, garbage.”
He survived thanks to Bruce and Terri McDonnell who heard a strange noise coming from the trash.
“And I said, sounds like a cat. I’ll help it out,” said Bruce. “And then, you know, you look over the top of the dumpster, and you don’t expect to see a baby with still an umbilical cord attached to him.”
It was 50 degrees outside and the baby’s cries were strained. The couple called for an ambulance.
“I brought him to my chest,” said Terri about how she tried to warm him up. “He was very, very fortunate, because he wouldn’t have been able to cry for very much longer because of his hypothermia.”
Some 41 years later, Sean returned to where his life nearly ended.
“Monday would have been garbage day,” said Sean about how close he was to ending up in a landfill.
After the couple called for help, Glenn Ericksen was one of the first paramedics on scene. He met Sean back at the spot where they first met four decades ago.
“And I got handed you, you very small,” Ericksen said to Sean. “And I’m looking at you, like saying, how could somebody do that to a child?”
That’s the same question Sean has and he’s been searching for that answer.
“I need to know why,” he said. “Like I was a burden to somebody for being born.”
Sean also wants whoever put him in that dumpster brought to justice. He’s being fully supported on that journey by the couple who found and saved him, then adopted him.
“I want them held accountable to the extent that it will make Sean feel better,” said Bruce.
Terri, who knows the trauma this causes Sean, said, “We are behind him all the way.”
While his beginning was difficult, he was deeply loved by his new parents.
“Just what a miracle it was,” said Terri as she teared up.
They saw him as a gift and gave him a wonderful life.
“Just warm and loving and just happy,” said Sean about his childhood.
Sean was 5 years old when he learned he had been adopted. He did not know the rest of his story until he turned 34. That’s when he told Terri he wanted all the details of his background. She put together a book called “The Story of You,” and filled each page with pictures of the happy life he lived but also notes and newspaper clippings about his abandonment.
“And it’s just like a load of bricks,” said Sean.
He wanted to track down his biological parents, so he used two DNA testing kits. Sean thought he would find his biological parents were scared teenagers.
“I know who they are,” said Sean, who was surprised by what he found.
At the time he was discarded in the trash by someone, his biological parents were in their 30’s.
“I know one was a mailman. One was a police dispatcher,” said Sean.
He says the DNA results showed he wasn’t his biological mom’s first baby.
“I found a half-sibling who’s born barely a year before I was born,” said Sean.
He dug further and found that baby was safely put up for adoption. Then the couple, who had married, had two more daughters after he was discarded.
“They need to be held accountable,” said Sean.
In 2018, as he reached out to relatives he found through the DNA tests, Sean said he was told to stop contacting them.
“Or there would be harassment charges brought up against me,” said Sean.
In 2019, he went to the Arlington Heights Police Department to pursue criminal charges and was told the case was still open.
“It’s attempted murder,” said Sean.
But now he’s being told it’s too late because there was a statute of limitations back then for attempted murder. Police then destroyed all evidence, including the yellow towel he was found wrapped in when he was left in the trash.
“It was as though I was in that dumpster all over again,” said Sean.
The dark truth for Sean, had he died, charges could have been brought against whoever left him in the trash. There’s no statute of limitations for murder.
“Maybe we can have a prison of their own making, and they’ll live out in the open with everybody knowing the truth,” said Sean.
He plans to file a civil lawsuit against his biological parents hoping to get a court order to get official blood tests. We tried unsuccessfully to reach Sean’s biological parents.
Sean also is talking with the Save Abandoned Babies Foundation – hoping to prevent more cases like his. Illinois’ safe haven law allows parents to safely drop off newborns, anonymously, at hospitals and police and fire stations. This law designed to stop babies getting dumped and killed in places like garbage cans.
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California Gov. Newsom defers clemency decision as incoming LA County district attorney reviews Menendez brothers case
California Gov. Gavin Newsom will defer his decision on the Menendez brothers’ clemency petition to allow for incoming Los Angeles County District Attorney Nathan Hochman to review the case, his office announced Monday.
“The Governor respects the role of the District Attorney in ensuring justice is served and recognizes that voters have entrusted District Attorney-elect Hochman to carry out this responsibility,” Newsom’s office said in a statement. “The Governor will defer to the DA-elect’s review and analysis of the Menendez case prior to making any clemency decisions.”
Lyle and Erik Menendez have spent roughly 35 years in state prison after they were convicted in their parents’ 1989 murder. Outgoing District Attorney George Gascón sent letters in support of the brothers’ clemency to Newsom after a Netflix show and documentary revived interest in the brothers’ case.
“I strongly support clemency for Erik and Lyle Menendez, who are currently serving sentences of life without possibility of parole. They have respectively served 34 years and have continued their educations and worked to create new programs to support the rehabilitation of fellow inmates,” Gascón said in a statement before losing his re-election bid.
In an interview, Hochman said if the case is not resolved by a Nov. 25 habeas petition hearing — when a judge will hear a motion requesting to vacate the first-degree murder convictions — he will review the case to determine whether or not to recommend resentencing.
Hochman, who will be sworn in on Dec. 2, indicated that he would petition the court for additional time to review the cast ahead of the resentencing hearing scheduled for Dec. 11.
“I wouldn’t engage in delay for delay’s sake because this case is too important to the Menendez brothers,” Hochman said in an interview earlier in November. “It’s too important to the victims’ family members. It’s too important to the public to delay more than necessary to do the review that people should expect from a district attorney.”
Such an analysis of the case would involve reviewing thousands of pages of prison files and transcripts of the months-long trials as well as speaking with law enforcement, prosecutors, defense counsel and victims’ family members, he added.
“Whatever position I ultimately end up taking, people should expect that I spent a long time thinking about it, analyzing the evidence,” Hochman said. “But my 34 years of criminal justice experience — involving hundreds of cases as a prosecutor and a defense attorney — allow me to work quickly and expeditiously in conducting this type of thorough review because I’ve done it in many, many cases before.”
After being arrested for their parents’ deaths in 1990, the Menendez brothers went through two trials where prosecutors argued that they murdered their parents because of greed. However, the siblings testified that they killed their parents in self-defense. The brothers told the jury about the alleged sexual abuse they said they experienced at the hands of their father during an emotional, highly publicized first trial.
Following closing arguments, the jurors spent roughly four days deliberating but failed to come to a unanimous decision. The judge declared a mistrial after the jury was unable to deliver a decision.
In the next and final trial, the presiding judge did not allow the defense to submit some evidence connected to the sexual abuse allegations. Prosecutors argued the brothers were lying about the allegations.
The second jury convicted Erik and Lyle Menendez of first-degree murder in 1995 and sentenced them to life in prison without the possibility of parole.
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Wyoming abortion laws, including ban on pills to end pregnancy, struck down by state judge
A state judge on Monday struck down Wyoming’s overall ban on abortion and its first-in-the-nation explicit prohibition on the use of medication to end pregnancy in line with voters in yet more states voicing support for abortion rights.
Since 2022, Teton County District Judge Melissa Owens has ruled consistently three times to block the laws while they were disputed in court.
The decision marks another victory for abortion rights advocates after voters in seven states passed measures in support of access.
One Wyoming law that Owens said violated women’s rights under the state constitution bans abortion except to protect a pregnant woman’s life or in cases involving rape and incest. The other made Wyoming the only state to explicitly ban abortion pills, though other states have instituted de facto bans on the medication by broadly prohibiting abortion.
The laws were challenged by four women, including two obstetricians, and two nonprofit organizations. One of the groups, Wellspring Health Access, opened as the state’s first full-service abortion clinic in years in April 2023 following an arson attack in 2022.
“This is a wonderful day for the citizens of Wyoming — and women everywhere who should have control over their own bodies,” Wellspring Health Access President Julie Burkhart said in a statement.
The recent elections saw voters in Missouri clear the way to undo one of the nation’s most restrictive abortion bans in a series of victories for abortion rights advocates. Florida, Nebraska and South Dakota, meanwhile, defeated similar constitutional amendments, leaving bans in place.
Abortion rights amendments also passed in Arizona, Colorado, Maryland and Montana. Nevada voters also approved an amendment in support of abortion rights, but they’ll need to pass it again it 2026 for it to take effect. Another that bans discrimination on the basis of “pregnancy outcomes” prevailed in New York.
The abortion landscape underwent a seismic shift in 2022 when the U.S. Supreme Court overturned Roe v. Wade, a ruling that ended a nationwide right to abortion and cleared the way for bans to take effect in most Republican-controlled states.
Currently, 13 states are enforcing bans on abortion at all stages of pregnancy, with limited exceptions, and four have bans that kick in at or about six weeks into pregnancy — often before women realize they’re pregnant.
Nearly every ban has been challenged with a lawsuit. Courts have blocked enforcement of some restrictions, including bans throughout pregnancy in Utah and Wyoming. Judges struck down bans in Georgia and North Dakota in September 2024. Georgia’s Supreme Court ruled the next month that the ban there can be enforced while it considers the case.
In the Wyoming case, the women and nonprofits who challenged the laws argued that the bans stood to harm their health, well-being and livelihoods, claims disputed by attorneys for the state. They also argued the bans violated a 2012 state constitutional amendment saying competent Wyoming residents have a right to make their own health care decisions.
As she had done with previous rulings, Owens found merit in both arguments. The abortion bans “will undermine the integrity of the medical profession by hamstringing the ability of physicians to provide evidence-based medicine to their patients,” Owens ruled.
The abortion laws impede the fundamental right of women to make health care decisions for an entire class of people — those who are pregnant — in violation of the constitutional amendment, Owens ruled.
Wyoming voters approved the amendment amid fears of government overreach following approval of the federal Affordable Care Act and its initial requirements for people to have health insurance.
Attorneys for the state argued that health care, under the amendment, didn’t include abortion. Republican Gov. Mark Gordon, whose administration has defended the laws passed in 2022 and 2023, did not immediately return an email message Monday seeking comment.
Both sides wanted Owens to rule on the lawsuit challenging the abortion bans rather than allow it to go to trial in the spring. A three-day bench trial before Owens was previously set, but won’t be necessary with this ruling.
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Two women told House panel Matt Gaetz paid them “for sex” via Venmo, their attorney says
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