Baby found abandoned in toppled stroller in Times Square as police search for father
Police found a one-year-old baby girl alone in a toppled-over stroller near West 44th Street and Broadway on Tuesday night, left in the middle of Times Square, one of the busiest intersections in the country, while her father walked away after an apparent dispute with the child's mother.
Authorities responded to a call about the infant around 11:00 p.m. Tuesday. When officers arrived, they found the child alert but sitting in a stroller that had fallen over. The baby was taken to a hospital in stable condition, as Breitbart reported.
Police believe the father abandoned the baby following a dispute with the child's mother. Officials say they know who the man is and indicated he may be homeless. He is now being sought on charges of child abandonment and custodial interference.
What investigators know so far
The New York Post reported that the man is believed to have ditched the baby after the stroller tumbled over. Rather than pick up his child, he apparently kept walking, leaving a one-year-old girl face-down in the glow of Broadway's billboards at nearly midnight.
ABC7 quoted officials describing the ongoing investigation:
"Officials say they are continuing to go through surveillance video from the area to trace the father's steps. He is being sought for child abandonment and custodial interference."
Times Square is among the most surveilled public spaces in America. Cameras blanket nearly every block. That should work in investigators' favor as they try to reconstruct the father's movements before and after he left his daughter behind.
Still, as of the most recent reporting, police had not announced an arrest. The father's name has not been released publicly, nor has the child's. The mother's identity and whereabouts remain unclear.
New York's safe-haven law, and why it doesn't apply here
New York's Abandoned Infant Protection Act allows a parent to surrender a newborn up to 30 days old anonymously and without criminal prosecution, but only if the baby is left with an appropriate person or in a suitable location, and the parent promptly notifies someone of the infant's whereabouts. The state's own guidance spells out the boundaries clearly:
"A parent is not guilty of a crime if the infant is left with an appropriate person or in a suitable location and the parent promptly notifies an appropriate person of the infant's location. A hospital, staffed police or fire station are examples of safe and suitable choices."
A sidewalk stroller near 44th and Broadway at 11:00 p.m. is none of those things. And this child is a one-year-old, well past the 30-day threshold the law covers. The safe-haven statute, in other words, offers no shield here. The father faces potential criminal liability on two fronts: abandonment and custodial interference.
The state's guidance also notes that a person surrendering an infant under the law "is not required to give his or her name." That provision exists to encourage desperate parents to make safe choices. Leaving a baby in a fallen stroller on a crowded sidewalk at night is the opposite of safe.
A city where public safety keeps slipping
This incident lands in a city already struggling with public safety failures across multiple fronts. Recent reporting on New York crime trends has shown a police force losing officers while subway violence surges, a troubling backdrop for any parent, bystander, or tourist trying to feel safe in public spaces.
The fact that police believe the suspect may be homeless raises additional questions about the city's capacity to track and hold accountable individuals cycling through shelters, encampments, and public spaces without stable addresses. None of those questions excuse what happened to this child. But they point to a system that too often fails the most vulnerable.
New York has also faced a string of alarming public-safety episodes in recent months. A federal indictment revealed that bombing suspects had also planned to drive a vehicle into a crowd in the city, a reminder that the threats facing New Yorkers range from the catastrophic to the deeply personal.
Unanswered questions
The case leaves a long list of open questions. What was the nature of the dispute between the parents? Where is the mother now, and does she have custody? Was the father already known to child-welfare authorities? What specific surveillance footage have investigators recovered, and how close are they to locating the suspect?
There is also a discrepancy in reporting about the child's age. The primary report describes a one-year-old baby girl, while other references suggest the child may be as young as six months old. Police have not clarified publicly.
What is clear: a baby was left alone at night in a stroller that had fallen over, on one of the most trafficked streets in the Western Hemisphere. She survived because someone called the police. Not because anyone responsible for her acted like it.
Across the country, stories of children harmed or endangered by the adults charged with protecting them continue to surface with grim regularity. A Shreveport father recently killed eight children in an Easter rampage, a case that shook communities already weary of family violence. The circumstances differ wildly. The common thread is children paying the price for adult failure.
Meanwhile, advocates for victims and families have pushed for greater public attention to cases where the system falls short. The White House recently called out major networks for ignoring an Angel Families event honoring Americans harmed by preventable failures, a broader pattern of institutions looking away when accountability gets uncomfortable.
What happens next
Police are combing through surveillance footage and working to locate the father. If arrested and charged, he would face child abandonment and custodial interference counts. The child remains in stable condition at a hospital whose name has not been disclosed.
The baby girl is alive because a stranger or a passerby did what her own father apparently would not, notice that she needed help and act on it. In a city that spends billions on social services, housing programs, and crisis intervention, a one-year-old was left face-down on a sidewalk at midnight.
That's not a policy debate. That's a child who deserved better from the one person the law says is supposed to protect her.






