Police allegedly raided the wrong home and threw flash-bang stun grenades that injured a 17-month-old boy with special needs and awaiting open heart surgery.
Courtney Price claims that cops broke the window of an Ohio home they were staying in and deployed flash-bangs near her son Waylon, who was on a ventilator.
‘All I seen was lights flashing and smoke coming into the house. I didn’t know what to do because there was guns pointed at me,’ Prince told CBS News of the incident last Wednesday afternoon.
‘I wanted to run to him, but I knew if I ran to him… they could’ve shot.’
Price said cops took her outside and handcuffed her.
‘I kept screaming, “My baby, my baby is on a ventilator. My baby’s in here,”‘ she said.
Waylon was covered in glass and smoke and treated at a hospital for burns, his mom said.
‘His diagnosis is chemical pneumonitis from the chemicals in the flash-bang,’ she said.
But the Elyria Police Department said that officers used ‘two diversionary devices commonly known as “flash-bangs”‘ that produce sound and light and ‘are intended to distract the suspects attention’.
‘Diversionary devices do not produce a continuous burn and they do not deploy or contain any pepper gas or chemical agents,’ the police department stated on Facebook on Friday.
‘Elyria Police Detectives, Elyria Fire Paramedics and the mother assessed the condition of the child, confirming that the child did not sustain any apparent, visible injuries.’
The mother told detectives that she planned to take her son to a hospital for his ‘pre-existing illness unrelated to the tactical operation’ but did not have a car seat for transportation, according to the police department. Detectives called an ambulance, which took the child to a hospital.
‘Any allegation suggesting the child was exposed to chemical agents, lack of medical attention or negligence is not true,’ the police department stated.
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