Organ donation advocacy groups weigh in on court intervention

Channel 3000 
MADISON, Wis. - A national organ donation advocacy organization is weighing in on a decision to block a family from donating a child's organs last month.

News 3 reported earlier this week that 5-year-old Brayden Turnbill's family was blocked by a Dane County assistant district attorney and a judge from donating his organs. Turnbill died on Oct. 24 at UW Hospital after being taken from his home with head and chest injuries that investigators said were from child abuse.

Dane County Assistant District Attorney Tom Fallon asked Judge Peter Anderson for a restraining order in the case against the UW Hospital Organ Procurement Office. Prosecutors and the Dane County medical examiner argued that the body needed to remain completely intact to determine the cause and manner of death. Those court proceedings are sealed, but Anderson granted the restraining order, and Turnbill died that evening after life support was removed.

Thursday, CEO of Donate Life America David Fleming spoke with News 3 about this case and another from earlier this week in Pittsburgh. A DA in Allegheny County tried to intervene to stop the organ donation by the family of a 2-year-old child police said was a victim of child abuse. A judge sided with doctors and allowed the organ donation to go forward to save a 7-year-old girl.



______________________________________________________ 
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In California: 
www.donateLIFEcalifornia.org | www.doneVIDAcalifornia.org 
Outside California: 
www.organdonor.gov | www.donatelife.net

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