Parents arrested after pulling son with brain cancer out of hospital
The parents who pulled their cancer-stricken son from a British
hospital and spurred an international search for the boy have been
ordered to appear Monday in a court in Spain, where they were arrested,
police said.
Brett and Naghmeh King
took their 5-year-old son, Ashya, who has brain cancer, to France and
then Spain late last week, authorities said. Hotel staff members in
Malaga, Spain, recognized Ashya and his family from media coverage and
contacted police.
Authorities did not
confirm what charges the couple will face, but say that "cruelty" could
be one of them as suggested by British law.
British police have arrived in Spain to question the parents, Malaga police told CNN. The British Crown Prosecution Service will be working on extradition efforts.
Father: I took son to get treatment
The court appearance is part of a European arrest order that was issued by Britain against the couple.
Their arrests came hours
after Brett King publicly asserted that he and his wife are not
kidnappers and are not neglecting their son.
"We were most disturbed
today to find that his face is all over the Internet and newspapers, and
we've been labeled as kidnappers, putting his life at risk, neglect,"
King said in a YouTube video posted Saturday.
"We're very happy with his progress," the father said in the video. "We're not neglecting him."
The father is seen sitting on a bed with his son leaning against him. He points to a machine on the nightstand next to him.
British police say the boy's parents, Naghmeh and Brett King, took him without authorization from a hospital on Thursday.
"We've got loads of these feeds here. We've got iron supplements and we've got Calpol,"
an over-the-counter medication, King said. "As you can see, there's
nothing wrong with him. He's very happy, actually. Since we took him out
of hospital, he's been smiling a lot more. He's been very much
interacting with us."
Brett King defended his
actions in the video made shortly before his arrest. He accuses two
doctors at the hospital for not allowing him to seek proton beam
treatment outside of Britain, even though he said he was ready to pay
for the treatment himself.
"We pleaded with them
for proton beam treatment. They looked at me straight in the face and
said with his cancer, which is called medulloblastoma, it would have no
benefit whatsoever." King said he then looked on the Internet and found
sites in the United States, France and Switzerland on proton beam
treatment that "said the opposite that it would be beneficial for him."
The University Hospital
in Southampton issued a statement saying they are working with doctors
in Malaga to ensure Ashya's welfare and "are delighted that he has been
found."
"We are aware of the
comments made online by his father," the statement said. "Throughout
Ashya's admission we have had conversations about the treatment options
available to him and we had offered the family access to a second
opinion, as well as assistance with organizing treatment abroad."
After Ashya was taken
from the hospital without authorization Thursday, the family --
including Ashya's six siblings -- boarded a ferry and headed to
Cherbourg, France, that night, police in Britain said.
Interpol issued an international missing person notice to the agency's 190 member countries to help find Ashya.
While authorities were
searching for the boy, Detective Superintendent Dick Pearson said Ashya
is not mobile on his own, cannot communicate verbally and is supposed to
be receiving constant medical care because of recent surgery and
"ongoing medical issues."
"Without this specialist
24-hour care, Ashya is at risk of additional health complications which
place him at substantial risk," Pearson said Friday.
After the parents' arrest Saturday night, authorities acknowledged they could face criticism.
"All of our efforts
resulted from explicit medical advice that Ashya's life was in danger,"
said Assistant Chief Constable Chris Shead of Britain's Hampshire
Constabulary.
"I am very aware that
there are comments about the rights and wrongs of our approach, but when
we are told by experts that any child's life is at risk we will make no
apologies for being as proactive as possible."
Hampshire police said
Ashya was taken to Materno Infantile Hospital in Spain and that the
facility was communicating with Southampton General Hospital, where the
boy had been removed by his parents.
It was not immediately clear what happened to the Kings' other children.
In the United states
only a handful of hospitals offer proton-beam therapy after surgery,
including Massachusetts General Hospital, where the late U.S. Sen. Ted
Kennedy was treated for brain cancer in 2008. He died just a year after
his surgery for malignant glioma.
That surgery was
followed by six weeks of radiation. Kennedy wrote in a Newsweek magazine
article at the time that he underwent proton-beam therapy.
The theory behind proton
therapy is that its high-energy particles zone in specifically on the
tumor and so do not harm the surrounding healthy tissue as much as the
X-ray photons in conventional therapy, said Dr. Donald O'Rourke,
associate professor of neurosurgery at the University of Pennsylvania
School of Medicine.
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