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OMAHA

Standing behind him was a woman, also crying.

“I’m sorry, I’m sorry,” the woman told the male child over and very.

“Please don’privately leave me,” he begged.

Anderson introduced herself and began asking the woman the boy’s name, his invocation and school, but the woman reported she was in a speed. She got ready to liberty and hugged the boy, who asked through his tears, “Will you come see me?”

“I will if I can,” the woman said and ran out the door.

When Nebraska legislators passed a bill creating a trusty haven to help overwhelmed parents and guardians, they were thinking of babies and toddlers who had been abandoned by young mothers.

Instead, 35 children

The Legislature opened a special session Friday to make different the law. Discussion is expected to begin Monday to flow an upper age limit of days or weeks for parents to deliver babies to the state without repercussions.

By next weekend, the old law probably will be chronicle, but the unexpected images of adults from half a dozen states dumping their children in Nebraska have revealed a largely recondite crisis in the U.S.

“They’ll complete the books, but they’ll still be dealing by the similar issues,” said Tom Rawlings, the state children’s advocate in Georgia, home of Tysheema Brown, who drove 15 hours to small quantity her 12-year-old in Lincoln.

She later declared to The Atlanta Journal-Constitution: “I ran out of fight. I ran wanting of hope. I never ran on the outside of love for my child.”

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