Left: Chelsea Berg (Collin County Jail). Center: Christopher Alexander (Collin County Jail). Right: Dawson Zamora (GoFundMe).
A Texas couple has been arrested after a toddler arrived at a hospital with life-threatening injuries that led to him being placed on life support, Lone Star State police say.
Chelsea Rene Berg, 30, stands accused of injury to a child, according to Collin County authorities. The mother”s boyfriend, Christopher Thomas Alexander, 30, is charged with injury to a child causing great bodily injury, stalking, and tampering with physical evidence with intent to impair, according to the Collin County Sheriff’s Office.
Both defendants were arrested on Oct. 16. Alexander is still in jail.
Jail records show, however, that Berg was able to quickly make bond and secure her release the same day, with conditions that barred her from contacting her son, Dawson Cain Zamora, 3. Later, her attorneys filed an emergency petition based on the boy’s medical condition that allowed her to see him, Collin County court records show.
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On Oct. 14, Alexander brought Dawson to a hospital in McKinney – a large suburb 35 miles due north of Dallas – allegedly telling staff he heard a “thud” and found the boy injured, according to court documents obtained by Dallas-based Fox affiliate KDFW.
Doctors soon determined the boy was suffering from severe trauma, including a brain bleed, bruising in various stages of healing all over his body, wounds to his chest and stomach, and other injuries, according to law enforcement. Such injuries were not consistent with a lone thud, hospital staff determined, and local police were called. A warrant for Alexander’s arrest was issued later that same day.
When questioned by detectives, Berg relayed a narrative in which she left Dawson with her boyfriend at around 7:20 a.m. on the day in question, police say. Then, she received a text about the boy eating lunch. Sometime after that, the boy’s mother received a frantic phone call from Alexander about heading to the hospital, police say.
At the hospital, Berg said she first heard about Alexander’s claim of the purported thud while the boyfriend was in another room. After the so-called thud, Alexander allegedly told Berg he found the boy injured. The child’s mother said her boyfriend did not elaborate beyond that, law enforcement claimed.
Alexander declined to speak with police at the hospital after obtaining a lawyer, according to an arrest affidavit obtained by KDFW.
Berg spoke more freely.
Detectives showed the mother pictures of Dawson’s injuries and, in response, she insisted her son did not have any such injuries when she left him with Alexander while she went to work that day, police say.
On Oct. 19, Berg reportedly received word that Dawson had no brain activity and would be taken off life support. The emergency bond motion was filed so she could “say goodbye to her son before he passes away,” KDFW reports. The court granted the motion the next day.
Dawson’s great-niece started a GoFundMe to raise funds for the family’s medical expenses.
“Dawson was tragically abused,” the online fundraiser reads. “He has already undergone emergency treatment, and doctors expect him to be hospitalized for many months as he begins the long journey of healing—physically, emotionally, and mentally. This has turned our family’s world upside down. No child should ever have to endure what Dawson has been through.”
The boy’s father, who lives in the Texas Panhandle town of Amarillo, said his son was medically dead, but revived by staff at the hospital, in comments to Amarillo-based CBS affiliate KFDA.
“In the CT scan and MRI scan, there was found prior bruising that did not coincide with the healing process of the current bruises that are on him now,” Dahrian Zamora told the TV station. “He was beaten before this attack. The attack that killed him wasn’t the only attack. There’s prior abuse in the home.”
