Firefighters assisted a pregnant woman injured in the Morgan

MORGAN HILL
– When Mia Dominguez entered the world Thursday night as a
healthy baby girl, sighs of relief could be heard from San Jose to
Morgan Hill. That she was alive at all was considered something of
a miracle.
MORGAN HILL – When Mia Dominguez entered the world Thursday night as a healthy baby girl, sighs of relief could be heard from San Jose to Morgan Hill. That she was alive at all was considered something of a miracle.

“We were really worried at first,” said Lt. Joe Sampson, of the Morgan Hill Police Department.

Thursday afternoon Mia’s mother, Sabrina Dominguez, 21, was in the wrong place at the wrong time. She had stopped at the Morgan Hill Post Office to mail a letter just as a car driven by Eula Chipman, 75, came barreling through the doors and smashed into the lobby wall.

Chipman has not been cited and still has a valid driver’s license. However, MHPD has submitted a request to the state Department of Motor Vehicles that Chipman be given a driving test and an eye test, Lt. Terrie Booten said Monday. The department also suggested revoking her driver’s license.

On Monday, Dominguez hired John J. Garvey, a personal injury case attorney, to handle her case. He did not return several phone calls Monday.

No other persons were injured in the incident, police said.

“It could have been worse,” Sampson said Friday. He said that, while Dominguez appeared to have broken legs, no upper body injuries were apparent so they hoped the baby had not been injured.

Dominguez was taken by medical helicopter to Santa Clara Valley Medical Center in San Jose where she later delivered her baby.

Doctors took X-rays of Dominguez’s legs Friday morning.

“I think I have one leg broken (her left) and two broken toes (on her right foot),” Dominguez said Friday.

The Morgan Hill Post Office looks a bit different now but is open for business. Postmaster Darrell Stoke said the retail counter opened later than usual Friday morning because his employees were talking to counselors brought in to discuss the incident.

Thursday’s glass and debris had been swept up. Stoke said Monday morning that he had not heard back from the contractor with the estimated cost of repair.

By Friday morning, while the entire glass door and transom structure was gone, lobby access to post office boxes was very much open.

“It’s like Hawaii,” Stoke said of the open air lobby. A deep porch, not damaged in the accident, protects the lobby from rain and, except for the missing doors, the only sign of trouble is plywood covering the stamp machine, destroyed in the crash.

Stoke said he hadn’t seen Dominguez or the baby yet but was planning to visit soon.

“I’m going to run up there today or tomorrow to visit,” Stoke said Monday. “I’ll take flowers, cards and anything else people want me to take.”

Dominguez said that, as of Monday morning, Chipman had not called her at the hospital.

Thursday’s crash was the third time a car plowed through Post Office windows. In early 2003, a car took out the windows at the north end of the building, narrowly missing patrons standing in the Post Office box bays.

Sampson said he was discussing safety features with Post Office officials.

“We talked about placing bollards in front of the windows,” Sampson said. Bollards are sturdy concrete or steel posts.

Dominguez gave birth to her daughter naturally, although doctors considered performing a Caesarian section. It was Dominguez’s first childbirth.

It is still unclear if Dominguez’s labor was triggered by the accident. Two separate ultrasounds done several weeks ago produced two different due dates – Feb. 22 and March 5.

Staff Writer Eric Leins contributed to this report.

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