I helped a starving newborn found beside an unconscious woman — years later, he honored me with a medal on stage.

It rewired me into someone who was always preparing for the next heartbreak.”

Working as a police officer, Trent had faced numerous traumatic incidents: break-ins, violent crimes, car accidents, and emergencies that pushed the boundaries of human endurance.

But nothing in his experience, he says, prepared him for what would unfold on a freezing February morning in an abandoned apartment on Seventh Street.

The Call That Changed Everything

The dispatch call came at 2:17 a.m., labeled simply as a welfare check. Neighbors had reported hearing a baby crying for hours, while the building itself had a reputation for abandonment, mold, and unsafe conditions.

“I thought it would be just another routine check,” Trent recalled. “But instinct told me otherwise.”

He and his partner, Officer Riley, arrived at the Riverside Apartments fifteen minutes later. The front door hung crooked, and a faint smell of mildew permeated the stairwell.

But amid the decay, the cries of an infant cut through the early-morning stillness. The officers ascended the stairs quickly, hearts pounding with an urgency Trent describes as primal.

Upon entering the apartment, they were confronted with a grim scene. A woman lay unresponsive on a mattress in the corner.

Nearby, a four- to five-month-old infant, dressed only in a soiled diaper, trembled from cold and hunger. His face was red from screaming, and his tiny body shook uncontrollably.

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