Crime

Held without charge, a Miami inmate’s unborn child asks court for release in odd case

For eight months, someone has been held at Turner Guilford Knight Correctional Center with no charge.

At least that’s what lawyers are arguing in Florida’s Third District Court of Appeal. Natalia Harrell, an inmate at TGK, is carrying the person behind the case: an unborn child. And the case could even set a precedent amid a legal system navigating complex arguments in a post-Roe world.

On Thursday, attorney William M. Norris filed an emergency writ of habeas corpus, which allows the court to determine whether someone’s imprisonment is lawful. He argued that the fetus’ incarceration is a violation of his rights guaranteed by the U.S. and Florida constitutions.

“UNBORN CHILD has not been charged with any crime by the State,” the writ of habeas corpus said. ”Further, the State has placed the UNBORN CHILD in such inherently dangerous environment by placing the UNBORN CHILD in close proximity to violent criminal offenders.”

READ MORE: A Miami inmate’s unborn child is asking court for release. Lawyers want request denied

The 24-page document claims that the “draconian confinement” is harming Harrell’s unborn child. It says the fetus isn’t receiving adequate prenatal care, including vitamins and visits to specialists, and also has been the victim of negligence — at one point being trapped in a corrections transport van without air conditioning while temperatures exceeded 100 degrees.

The unborn child, the writ argues, should be released so they can get necessary care and treatment, be free from “unlawful and illegal detention” and avoid entering the world in a dangerous environment like a prison cell.

Harrell, 24, was arrested and charged with second degree murder — a felony punishable by life in prison — while six weeks pregnant on July 26, 2022. She was involved in a fatal quarrel that was caught on tape while inside an Uber near Southeast First Avenue and First Street in downtown Miami.

READ MORE: Police arrest woman they say fatally shot another in a packed Uber in downtown Miami

As she and Gladys Yvette Borcela argued, Harrell leaped from the third row of seats to the second row. Harrell’s lawyers say that she feared Borcela wanted to harm her and her unborn child, and that’s why she pulled out a gun from her purse and fired a single round.

James Reyes, director of Miami-Dade Corrections and Rehabilitation, must respond to the writ by Monday, according to court records. Harrell is also requesting a hearing for March 7, where her lawyers could argue why she should receive a bond.

This story was originally published February 20, 2023 at 8:07 AM.

Grethel Aguila
Miami Herald
Grethel covers courts and the criminal justice system for the Miami Herald. She graduated from the University of Florida (Go Gators!), speaks Spanish and Arabic and loves animals, traveling, basketball and good storytelling. Grethel also attends law school part time.
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