Midwest
Founder of Safe Haven Baby Boxes shares her story and hope for the future: 'A God-given purpose'
With Wisconsin recently legalizing “baby boxes” for anyone to surrender their newborn babies anonymously, the founder of the Safe Haven Baby Box program told Fox News Digital that there is still more work to be done across the United States.
The new law, passed in December, expanded the Badger State’s previous Safe Haven law, which permitted a parent to leave an infant younger than 72 hours old at a fire department, police department or hospital.
Now, with “baby boxes” legal in Wisconsin, a person can drop off these children anonymously (previously, it was required that the handoff happen face-to-face).
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“We’re currently active in 14 states,” Monica Kelsey, the Indiana-based founder of Safe Haven Baby Boxes, Inc., told Fox News Digital in an interview.
The first baby boxes should arrive in Wisconsin within a few months, she estimated.
Monica Kelsey, based in Indiana, is founder and CEO of Safe Haven Baby Boxes, Inc. She’s also the author of the book, “Blessed to Have Been Abandoned” (2021), a U.S. Navy veteran — and a mom of three. (Monica Kelsey)
“Baby boxes” with anonymous surrenders are legal in 22 states — a figure that Kelsey hopes will grow in the near future. (Safe Haven Baby Boxes, Inc. does not presently operate in all states where the boxes themselves are legal.)
A “baby box” is a safety device provided for use under a state’s Safe Haven Law. It “legally permits a mother in crisis to safely, securely and anonymously surrender if they are unable to care for their newborn,” says the organization’s website.
These boxes are installed in the exterior walls of fire departments or other locations — and are electronically monitored and temperature controlled.
“Their child’s life is going to go on. Their life is going to go on.”
Wisconsin Gov. Tony Evers said of the new baby box law in his state, known as Wisconsin Act 79, “Expanding safeguards for kids across Wisconsin is a priority for my administration, and this bill provides a solution that will hopefully keep newborns and infants safe from harm.”
He added in a press statement shared by his office in early December, “I will continue to advocate for initiatives that work to make our communities and families safer, and I look forward to seeing more bipartisan bills like this in the future.”
In a statement shared with Fox News Digital, Pro-Life Wisconsin said that it “supports efforts to prevent the illegal abandonment of newborn infants, often resulting in their tragic demise, by offering ways to hand over newborns lawfully and safely to proper authorities,” said Matt Sande, legislative director of the organization.
‘They can surrender their child’
When a person places an infant in the box, an alarm will alert after a set period of time, letting officials know a child is inside and allowing the person to avoid attention.
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A door on the interior side of the box allows for medical professionals to access the baby and provide medical care.
There “is 100% anonymity,” Kelsey told Fox News Digital.
Safe Haven Baby Boxes, like the one above, are legal in 22 states. They allow for the safe and anonymous surrender of an infant. (Safe Haven Baby Boxes)
“If they [the parents or caregivers] don’t want to walk in and face someone, if they don’t want to talk to you, they can surrender their child in an electronically monitored baby box and walk away knowing that they just saved their child’s life,” she said.
“Their child’s life is going to go on. Their life is going to go on.”
While each state has some sort of “Safe Haven” law allowing for the surrender of an infant up to a certain age, the laws differ from state to state.
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For instance, some states, Kelsey said, allow parents to surrender their children up to three months after their births — others, just three days after their births.
A federal law, she suggested, would streamline the process and make an already complicated and stressful situation easier to understand.
“If [the law] is confusing to [advocates] and we’re not in a moment of crisis, then it’s confusing to these women who are having the worst day of their life, and they’re trying to figure out what the law is,” she said.
As an adult, Kelsey met her biological mother, something she described as “the best and worst day of my life.” Much to her shock, her biological mother showed her a police report from August 1972 — with stunning details. (iStock)
The crusade to ensure the safe surrender of babies is personal to Kelsey — as she herself was abandoned as an infant.
“I didn’t know my beginnings,” she told Fox News Digital.
While she was aware she was adopted, her adoptive parents were not told the truth about her origins.
“My goal is to stop infant abandonment.”
“My adoptive parents were told when they adopted me that my birth parents were young and they couldn’t care for me, so they placed me for adoption,” she said.
“And that was not even close to the truth,” said Kelsey, who is the mother of three children.
As an adult, Kelsey met her biological mother, something she described as “the best and worst day of my life.”
Much to her shock, her biological mother showed her a police report from August 1972.
Kelsey said she hopes that one day a federal “Safe Haven” law will be passed. For now, each state has different laws and policies. Above, a baby box is shown in Kentucky. (Grace Ramey/Daily News via AP)
“She was brutally attacked and raped and left along the side of the road,” said Kelsey. “And this was in 1972, when abortion was illegal in our country, even in the cases of rape and incest.”
Her biological mother, just 17 at the time of the attack, pressed charges against the man.
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She later discovered she was pregnant.
“She was taken out of high school, not allowed to go back,” said Kelsey of her biological mother. “She was hidden for the remainder of the pregnancy.”
“She abandoned her child two hours after the child was born. That child ended up to be me.”
She continued, “And then she gave birth in April 1973 and abandoned her child two hours after the child was born. And that child ended up to be me.”
Kelsey added, “And so I stand on the front lines of this movement as one of these kids that wasn’t lovingly and safely and legally placed in a Safe Haven Baby Box by a mother that wanted me.”
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Despite her tumultuous start in life, Kelsey said she considers herself “blessed,” and is motivated by her strong faith.
“How blessed am I to to have been abandoned but now be saving abandoned children,” she told Fox News Digital.
“And it’s just it’s a God-given purpose. I don’t take it lightly,” she said. “I take it very seriously. And now I’m traveling the country doing His work.”
Monica Kelsey poses for a selfie with a child who was surrendered in a Safe Haven Baby Box. She said she knows these children are “going to struggle. One day they’re going to struggle to find their worth … But I want them to know they’re not alone.” (Monica Kelsey)
Kelsey wrote the book “Blessed to Have Been Abandoned: The Story of the Baby Box Lady,” published in April 2021.
She sends an autographed copy to each baby placed in one of the boxes.
“In this book, it shows the struggle of finding my worth,” she said.
“And they’re going to struggle one day. They’re going to struggle. One day they’re going to struggle to find their worth,” she said.
“But I want them to know that they’re not alone.”
Looking ahead, Kelsey said she has no specific goals for the Safe Haven Baby Boxes, apart from the big picture of child safety.
“I can’t change what happened to me — but I can change what happens to others.”
“My goal is to stop infant abandonment,” said Kelsey. “And wherever Christ leads me is where I’m going to go.”
As she also said to Fox 13 not long ago, “I can’t change what happened to me — but I can change what happens to others.”
What to know about Safe Haven Baby Boxes
The organization’s primary goal is to raise awareness of the Safe Haven Law.
Women in crisis can call or text the national 24-hour hotline (1-866-99BABY1) and receive counseling and assistance free of charge, according to the group.
To date, the hotline has received over 9,000 calls from every state in the U.S., it notes on its website (shbb.org).
Safe Haven Baby Boxes has referred over 500 women to crisis pregnancy centers, assisted in 9 adoption referrals, and had over 140 legal Safe Haven surrenders.
“Thirty-seven babies have been surrendered in our Baby Boxes,” says the organization.
“Three babies were surrendered directly to firefighters at Safe Haven Baby Box locations.”
For more Lifestyle articles, visit www.foxnews.com/lifestyle.
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Illinois
Multiple people shot in Centralia, Illinois: REPORT
CENTRALIA, Ill. – An investigation is underway after multiple people were shot Sunday in Centralia, Illinois, according to a report from WFCN News in southern Illinois.
FOX 2 has confirmed the Illinois State Police is investigating a shooting and taking over the investigation, but ISP could not confirm many further details as of 9 p.m. Sunday.
“The investigation is in its infancy and to protect the integrity of the investigation, no additional details will be released at this time,” ISP said in a statement to FOX 2.
According to WFCN News, the shooting happened around 5 p.m. near the 900 block of East Kell Street in Centralia. Multiple law enforcement agencies have since responded to scene and multiple victims are hospitalized, according to the report.
It’s unclear how many people may have been injured and what led up to the shooting.
Centralia, Illinois is about 70 miles, or just over an hour, east of St. Louis.
This is a developing story. FOX 2 will update as more information becomes available.
Indiana
Indiana mother charged with neglect after baby’s co-sleeping death
INDIANAPOLIS (WKRC) — An Indianapolis mother is now facing criminal charges after her 2-month-old baby died in an apparent improper co-sleeping environment, according to investigators.
According to a probable cause affidavit obtained by FOX 59/CBS 4, police were called to an area hospital on Sept. 19, 2024, following the death of 27-year-old Brooklyn Davis’ son. The boy had been found unresponsive in his family’s home early that morning, and Davis attempted CPR before he was rushed to the hospital.
The affidavit says the boy had been sleeping on Davis’ bed with his 6-year-old brother. Davis later showed investigators a video showing the baby sleeping chest down on the 6-year-old’s chest.
An autopsy concluded the baby’s cause of death was “sudden explained death of an infant” with an intrinsic factor, which included being “placed to sleep in a queen-sized mattress being shared with a 6-year-old sibling, along with numerous blankets and other miscellaneous items; discovered unresponsive in a prone position with his face turned to the side and partially covered with a blanket.”
A report from the Department of Child Services (DCS) indicated the boy had no known health issues and that Davis ran an FSSA-licensed day care and has “extensive training on child care and safe sleeping environments.”
Davis had been known to DCS prior to the baby’s death. The boy had been born marijuana-positive and, on July 2, 2024, Davis had reportedly signed a “Safe Sleep Safety Plan,” acknowledging she understood that the safest places for her baby to sleep were in a crib, pack-and-play or bassinet and warned that co-sleeping places the baby at risk of suffocation and sleeping areas should be kept free of blankets, pillows and other items. The plan also included a provision that Davis not use marijuana while caring for her children, but she told investigators during an interview that, the morning of her baby’s death, she had gone downstairs to smoke marijuana and left the children alone upstairs.
Davis’ two other children were removed from the home, and interviews with them revealed that co-sleeping with the infant happened often.
Investigators say they attempted to contact Davis several times after talking to her children.
“She called me on February 18, 2025, and said she didn’t do anything wrong, her baby died of SIDS,” the detective wrote in the affidavit. “Brooklyn never came in for an additional interview.”
Court records indicate the case was filed in March 2026. Davis was booked into jail on April 1 on three counts of neglect of a dependent. An initial hearing was held on April 7, and a bail review hearing is planned for Monday.
Iowa
Former Iowa State star, All-American Audi Crooks announces transfer destination
Former Iowa State center Audi Crooks has committed to Oklahoma State via the NCAA Transfer Portal. She has one season of eligibility remaining.
Crooks made 99 appearances and 95 starts during her three seasons at Iowa State. She averaged 25.8 points, 7.7 rebounds and 1.7 assists per game this past season, while shooting 64.9% from the field. Additionally, the 6-foot-3 star shot 1-11 from 3-point range.
Crooks played a leading role for the Cyclones from the moment she stepped on campus. She is a three-time All-Big 12 First-Team selection and two-time All-American. On April 2, Crooks announced her intention to enter the transfer portal.
“Cyclone Nation, thank you all for embracing me and showing up to Hilton every single game day. I’ve met so many of you out in the community, and I will cherish all of the genuine connections that I’ve built during my time at Iowa State,” Crooks wrote. “Words cannot fully express how grateful I feel to have called this place home.
“I want to thank my teammates for their friendship and all the great memories. … I still believe the grass is greener where you water it, and I’ve done that here.”
Now, Audi Crooks will aim to thrive in her new environment. Oklahoma finished the 2025-26 season with a 24-10 overall record.
The NCAA Transfer Portal officially opened on April 6 and closes on April 20. The new 15-day window was enacted following a recommendation by the women’s basketball oversight committee. Athletes don’t have to commit to a new school by the April 21 deadline.
To keep up with the latest players on the move, check out On3’s Transfer Portal wire. The On3 Transfer Portal Instagram account and Twitter account are excellent resources to stay up to date with the latest moves.
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