'Heartbreaking': Kim Kardashian reacts to 'American Idol' Syesha Mercado's newborn baby taken by authorities
One-time âAmerican Idolâ finalist Syesha Mercado is now fighting for the return of two children removed by Florida authorities within the past six months.
On Wednesday morning, Manatee County sheriffâs deputies surrounded a car carrying Mercado, her 10-day-old baby girl and her partner, Tyron Deener. Authorities then took custody of the baby to bring her to the hospital.
Deener broadcast the nearly hour-long encounter on Instagram Live. The video shows several sheriffâs vehicles nearby with flashing lights, and two deputies providing the couple with a court order to turn over the baby for a checkup at the hospital.
Mercado and Deener told the deputies the baby had been seen by doctors the day before. They also said they were on their way with the baby to the sheriffâs office at 8 a.m. Wednesday and were told no one was available.
After a court hearing Thursday morning, the baby was still in protective custody, according to Donisha Prendergast, a founder of the organization We Have the Right to be Right, which works to support a variety of social justice issues.
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The Background:Syesha Mercado fights for son's custody over claims of malnutrition
For more than three months, the couple has been working for the return of their 15-month-old son, AmenâRa, who was placed into foster care after what the couple thought was a routine trip to the hospital. The couple was concerned about malnutrition after Mercadoâs breast milk supply started to run dry, and the boy would not accept other fluids.
They took him to Johns Hopkins All Childrenâs Hospital in St. Petersburg on Feb. 26. Nearly two weeks later, St. Petersburg Police removed the parents from the hospital for trespassing. When the boy was discharged in late March, he was put in foster care over allegations of malnutrition.
According to the Manatee County Sheriffâs Office, medical staff reported that Mercado and Deener turned down a B-12 intramuscular shot, as recommended by the hospital, a claim that Mercado and Deener vehemently deny.
Previously:Critics say powerful pediatrician too quick to diagnose child abuse, traumatizing families
Read the full foster care investigation:Florida took thousands of kids from families, then failed to keep them safe.
Mercado said at the time she was never notified that her son had been discharged and child welfare officials did not talk to any family members for possible placement.
While still engaged in a legal battle for custody of her son, Mercado gave birth to a baby girl. Deputies indicated during the recorded confrontation Wednesday that the couple didnât notify authorities about the child.
Deener is heard on the Instagram video saying that because of past situations, they have asked that all inquiries about Mercado and the baby be directed to their attorney, and âthey didnât do that.â The attorney was seen pacing across the road as the standoff unfolded.
Before caseworkers could take the girl, she began screaming and Mercado breastfed her and provided authorities with a bottle of breast milk. Mercado broke down in tears as she carried the baby to another vehicle.
âYou have no heart. My baby is days old, and you're taking my baby away from me,â Mercado screamed as a caseworker repeatedly asks her to put the baby in the car. âMy baby is healthy. My baby is happy.â
Mercado's case prompts social media outcry
Mercado has been outspoken on social media since Florida authorities took her son as she fights to bring her children home.
"They stole our baby from us ⊠this major injustice is not just against MY family, but families all over. Some are suffering in silence. But we will NOT be silenced by this act of terror and injustice," Mercado wrote on Instagram last week of her son, Amen'Ra, being taken. "We are stronger, wiser, and more resilient because of it."
"Help contribute to our legal fund," she wrote on Twitter, sharing a GoFundMe link. "It takes a TEAM and a BIG backing to go up against a BIG system. Thank you all for the support. We appreciate you all."
As of Wednesday, the family has raised more than $194,659 of a $200,000 goal on a GoFundMe page to cover legal bills.
Many on social media have also rallied behind the family to offer support and help share her story.
Twitter user @_MissSith wrote: "Iâve been so heart broken by this since reading their story yesterday morning and I all I want is for this family to be reunited with their baby."
"To all the Twitter friends, please pay attention to this story. Reach out and help anyway possible. This can happen to any parent in the US," tweeted @TeddAbramson.
Mercado's case has also received the attention of "Keeping Up With the Kardashians" star Kim Kardashian, who posted about the "American Idol" star to her Instagram Stories Aug. 14.
"Everyone please read and spread this story is absolutely heartbreaking. How a mother could go and seek help for her baby that is not wanting to eat, they take the baby into foster care and remove her newborn baby with no reports of abuse," Kardashian wrote, tagging Mercado.
Pattern of aggressive removals
Mercado is a 2005 graduate of Booker High Schoolâs Visual and Performing Arts Center in Sarasota, Florida, and was the third-place finalist in the seventh season of âAmerican Idolâ in 2008 behind David Archuleta and the winner, David Cook. She later toured in the musical âDreamgirlsâ and performed in the touring and Broadway companies of âThe Book of Mormon.â
She was given a key to her hometown of Sarasota on May 9, 2008, proclaimed to be Syesha Mercado Day.
Prendergast said she believes the âcouple is being targeted.â
âThis family has chosen to stand up for their rights,â she said. âThey are being targeted as an example.â
Prendergast said that in an open case such as the one involving Mercado, authorities âhave a right to her unborn child. If they see fit, they can remove the baby.â Prendergast said she advised Mercado âto stay as firm as possibleâ despite the high emotions in the situation.
As the Herald-Tribune, part of the USA TODAY Network, reported in May, the Mercado case involves physician Sally Smith, the head of the children protection team for Pinellas County.
Smith oversees nearly every case at All Childrenâs Hospital involving suspicious injuries. She is considered one of the most powerful figures in the regional child welfare system and has long been criticized by defense attorneys, parents and child welfare employees for her aggressive approach.
In some cases, she saw injuries others doctors did not.
The USA TODAY Network, as part of an investigation of Floridaâs child welfare system, previously reviewed hundreds of Smithâs cases and found more than a dozen instances where charges were dropped, parents were acquitted or caregivers had credible claims of innocence yet suffered irredeemable damage to their lives and reputations. Smith previously denied âany problems with my work.â
Prendergast said police brutality has helped to highlight the injustices in the system when it comes to Black people.
âWill Ra ever be able to tell you what heâs experiencing?â she said. âOur children donât have video cameras to show how theyâre being treated.â
Contributing: Pamela Avila, USA TODAY