Share
Wire

Police Say Children Helped Save Mom After Witnessing Abuse by Giving Note to School Bus Driver

Share

On Thursday in Las Cruces, New Mexico, 40-year-old Erik Alvarado allegedly threatened to kill his girlfriend.

The girlfriend later said he also abused her by beating, strangling and suffocating her. And he appears to have done those things in the presence of their three children, ranging from toddler to school-age.

The woman said she was deprived of her phone and the means to seek help, as he made her stay near him at all times. According to a post from the Las Cruces Police Department, the abuse went well into the night.



In the morning, Alvarado allowed his girlfriend to get her kids to the bus stop, and that’s when she made her desperate bid for help.

Trending:
The Baltimore Bridge Collapse Is Even More Devastating Than It Seems - It's an 'Economic Nuke Strike'

She wrote a note, handed it to her kids, and instructed them to give it to the school bus driver.

They did. The bus driver read it and called 911.

“Las Cruces police were notified of the incident about 8 a.m. Friday, April 23,” the post by the police department reads. “Investigators learned Alvarado initiated the physical altercation with his girlfriend about 8 p.m. Thursday and the abuse lasted through much of the night.

“Alvarado is accused of battering the woman, strangling her, and twice suffocating her with a pillow and a shirt. Investigators learned that, during the course of the evening, Alvarado threatened to kill the woman.”

The post also explained how the children successfully relayed their mother’s message, resulting in her rescue.

“The children did as they were asked, and the attentive bus driver called 911 to summon police to the home on the 4000 block of Inca Avenue,” it said.

“There, police found the woman with multiple cuts, bruises and abrasions consistent with her claims of physical abuse.”

Later on Friday, Alvarado was located and detained for questioning.

He has now been “charged with three third-degree felony counts of aggravated battery against a household member — two for suffocation of the victim and one for strangulation,” as well as “misdemeanor counts of battery against a household member and deprivation of property.”

Related:
Watch: Dr. Phil Schools 'The View' Hosts on Damage Done to Children by COVID-19 'Mismanagement'


Alvarado is currently in the Dona Ana County Detention Center and is being held without bond.

Thanks to the mother’s quick thinking and her childrens’ brave actions, she is alive. Hopefully, none of them will have to suffer such abuse again.

This article appeared originally on The Western Journal.

Submit a Correction →



Tags:
, , , ,
Share

Conversation