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2 families sue hospital after Colorado man claims he was switched at birth

▶ Watch Video: Colorado man believes he was switched at birth with another baby at a hospital

Two families are suing a local hospital after a Colorado man claimed he and another man were switched at birth 36 years ago.

Two years ago, Jeremy Morrison took a DNA test and found out his parents were not his biological parents. He told CBS affiliate KKTV in Colorado Springs that he always felt different from his family.   

“I didn’t have anyone that looked like me in my family,” Morrison said. “I was that blonde-haired kid that stood out in a family full of brown-haired people.”

Morrison told KKTV that his aunt provided DNA, and a man named Kyle Bylin matched as her nephew. Morrison said he does not have any cousins.  

“I know I definitely wouldn’t be here in Colorado today if I went home with the right parents,” Morrison said. “I would have been working the farm with my older brother that I never knew I had.”

Morrison said he believes he and Bylin were the only babies born on Jan. 26, 1988, at the same hospital in Grafton, North Dakota. 

“Me and Kyle didn’t grow up in the same area; we couldn’t have gotten switched at daycare or anything like that,” Morrison told KKTV.

Both sets of parents have met their biological sons, but the two men have not yet met each other, KKTV reported.

Morrison, Bylin and their parents are suing Unity Medical Center, which has denied the allegations, litigation records show.

Unity Medical Center told KKTV in a statement that it’s “currently working to better understand a highly unusual situation involving two men who apparently were separated from their biological parents at some point during their lives. Both men were born at our hospital on the same day in 1988, and we recognize the profound impact this discovery has had on them and their families.”

“Unfortunately, because of the passage of nearly four decades, the medical and staffing records that might have provided additional clarity no longer exist, and no members of the delivery team from that time are still employed by the hospital,” it said. “While we deeply sympathize with the men and their families, we have found no evidence to support claims that Unity Medical Center or its staff were responsible for what occurred.”

Sons say they learned father was killed by ICE through video, news reports

▶ Watch Video: "My dad had been taken away from me": Sons of man killed by ICE speak out Houston – Ronaldo Salgado said he learned his father, 52-year-old Mexican immigrant Lorenzo Salgado Araujo, had been shot by an Immigration and Customs Enforcement officer last week through a video posted online that depicted him "screaming" for help."He was actively bleeding. He was screaming for someone to help him," Ronaldo Salgado told CBS News during an interview in Houston this week. "I just felt a lot of fear at that point. And I was running around the site trying to look for answers but those answers never came."His younger brother, Lorenzo Salgado Jr., said he found out his father had died while on an airplane on the way to Houston to try to see him."Maybe an hour into the flight, I opened the same article that reported that the person had been shot," Lorenzo Jr. recounted. Then, he added, "the article updated to read, 'shot, killed.'" "I was going back and forth between the bathroom to like clear my nose," Lorenzo Salgado Jr. said. "And I really tried to stop the tears from falling because I didn't want anyone's attention. I really just wanted to get home and be with my family."Lorenzo Salgado Jr. noted he was not able to say goodbye to his father, who had lived in the U.S. for over three decades.Ronaldo Salgado, meanwhile, said he feels deeply guilty about what unfolded last week."I'm always going to feel some sort of guilt that I could have been there sooner, that I could have done something," he said, breaking down in tears. "I fear that I will always live with that guilt, because who knows what would've happened if I had been there or if I had arrived at the scene much sooner."Conflicting accounts The Department of Homeland Security said Salgado Araujo weaponized his work van during a traffic stop on July 7 in Houston, prompting an ICE agent to shoot and kill him. That allegation has been disputed by Salgado Araujo's family and the three men who were in the van, including his brother. They remain detained by ICE in Texas, facing deportation.While DHS has said Salgado Araujo was in the U.S. illegally, it has also admitted he was not the target of the ICE operation that preceded his killing. Salgado Araujo's relatives and friends have also said he lacked a criminal record, which has not been disputed by DHS.Federal officials at DHS and the Justice Department are investigating the fatal shooting, though an FBI probe is reviewing a potential assault on a federal agent. The Harris County District Attorney and the Texas Rangers have also announced separate investigations into the killing. Harris County District Attorney Sean Teare told CBS News he's "more than prepared" to file charges against ICE agents if he finds criminal wrongdoing on their part. He has sharply criticized ICE's tactics, arguing that "either these agents are completely untrained, or [they are] intentionally putting themselves in situations where they can justify firing into cars."On Tuesday, the FBI revealed in court papers that it is investigating whether drugs were in the van. In an application for a search warrant granted by a judge, an FBI agent said he spotted several bags inside the van that contained a "white crystal-like substance" he believes is consistent with methamphetamine. At the time, the agent said that law enforcement had not yet entered the van, but had taken photos of the bags from outside the vehicle.There is no indication that ICE's decision to pursue the Ford Transit van ahead of the fatal shooting was related to concerns about drugs. The FBI agent wrote: "The United States is currently gathering all facts related to this incident, including what may have caused the occupants of the vehicle to flee."Less than a week after Salgado Araujo was killed, an ICE officer fatally shot another immigrant in Maine, also during a traffic stop. The killing of 25-year-old Colombian immigrant Johan Sebastián Durán Guerrero escalated concerns over ICE's tactics, prompting the agency on Tuesday to pause most vehicle stops, pending a review.But that pause was short-lived. On Wednesday, after President Trump publicly criticized the moratorium, ICE agents were told they could continue to make vehicle stops and arrests.Lorenzo Salgado Araujo, on the far left, is pictured with members of his family. Ronaldo Salgado
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