News

Actions

Baby Braxton’s father accused of trafficking heroin

Posted at 7:01 PM, Jun 04, 2013
and last updated 2013-06-04 20:48:18-04

Virginia Beach, Va. - After receiving thousands of dollars from the city in a settlement, Baby Braxton Taylor's biological father is facing several drug charges.

Baby Braxton's mother and father left him at the hospital. Eventually, he ended up with a troubled foster mother who, right under the noses of social-services workers, abused him to death. That led to a NewsChannel 3 investigation, a lawsuit, and mother Kristen Wall's assurances that she would finally get clean.

But court records show Braxton's father, Ralph Michael Taylor, has not stayed away from drugs. Now, he's facing his most serious charges since the city paid him $75,000 in the lawsuit. He's facing trial in North Carolina for trafficking heroin. That's on top of other charges of driving impaired, and getting caught with drug paraphernalia.

Related:

Baby Braxton’s grandparents speak on the guilt and loss of their grandchild

Baby Braxton’s biological mother discusses years of drug addiction, baby’s death

Director who supervised case workers at Beach Social Services out after Baby Braxton Investigation

Baby Braxton’s biological parents get part of $450,000 settlement

New lawsuit filed against Virginia Beach in death of Baby Braxton

Experts tell Beach City Council how to fix problems that led to Baby Braxton’s death

Baby Braxton Investigation: Beach council members discuss leader of social services

Baby Braxton’s grandparents write angry letter to city council

Baby Braxton Investigation: Councilman calls for firing of Beach human services director

NewsChannel 3 gets big results in Baby Braxton investigation

Va. Beach Child Welfare “in crisis”, says state report after WTKR Baby Braxton investigation

Duties changed for supervisor in baby Braxton case

NewsChannel 3′s investigation into Baby Braxton’s death gets results

Backlash against couple who exposed baby Braxton abuse

Baby Braxton investigation continues