Cop who fell on the job sues
family of baby who almost drowned
An officer who went to help when a
baby fell in a pool says she slipped in a puddle.

Richard Cosmillo holds his
grandson, Joey Cosmillo, who is profoundly disabled after nearly
drowning in the family pool. Joey lives at a rehabilitation home
now, where Richard Cosmillo visits him daily. (GEORGE
SKENE, ORLANDO SENTINEL / October 8, 2007)
CASSELBERRY - In January, 1-year-old
Joey Cosmillo wandered into the backyard and fell into the family
pool. When his mother hauled him out, he wasn't breathing. Rescuers
were able to bring him back to life, but he suffered severe brain
damage and cannot walk, talk or even swallow.
Now, his family faces another burden: One of the rescuers,
Casselberry police Sgt. Andrea Eichhorn, is suing, alleging the
family left a puddle of water on the floor that afternoon, causing
her to slip and fall.
The boy's grandparents, named in the suit, are mystified and angry.
"The loss we've suffered, and she's
seeking money?" said Richard Cosmillo, 69, the boy's grandfather.
"Of course there's going to be water in the house. He was sopping
wet when we brought him in."
Eichhorn last week sued Richard Cosmillo; his wife, Maggie Cosmillo;
and the boy's mother, Angela Cosmillo, accusing them of negligence.
They were careless, according to the suit, and allowed the home they
shared to become unsafe.
As a consequence, Eichhorn broke her knee, something that kept her
off the job for two months, according to police Chief John Pavlis.
Joey now lives in a nursing home five miles away, where he gets
24-hour care. He breathes through one tube. He's fed through
another.
"He doesn't have any abilities -- any," his grandmother said. "He
can't sit. He can't swallow. He can't eat. We're not even sure he
can see."
She and Richard Cosmillo are the boy's legal guardians. For the
first two months after the accident, she remained at his bedside,
never once going home.
She has now gone back to work at a furniture store, and her husband
keeps watch on the boy. He visits every day.
"This thing," Maggie Cosmillo said, "has destroyed our lives
forever."
The baby's mother was the only one home Jan. 9, when the boy slipped
out of the house and wound up in the pool, according to a police
report.
She plunged in and dragged him out, carrying him inside, down a
hallway and into a bedroom. She also called 911.
Eichhorn arrived a few minutes later. As she stepped into the room
where rescuers were working on the boy, she slipped and went down on
one knee, then stood back up, according to Richard Cosmillo.
Later that day, she went to an emergency care center and eventually
to an orthopedist, according to her attorney, David Heil.
While she was on medical leave, Pavlis said, the city's insurer paid
her medical bills and provided disability checks.
Eichhorn, a 12-year department veteran, would not discuss the suit.
Her attorney said those benefits, paid by the city's workers'
compensation carrier, were not enough. The suit seeks an unspecified
amount of money.
Eichhorn, he said, is a victim. Her knee aches, and she will likely
develop arthritis.
If the Cosmillos had made their pool baby-proof, police would not
have been called to the scene, there would have been no water on the
floor, and Eichhorn would not have hurt herself, he said.
"It's a situation where the Cosmillos have caused these problems,
brought them on themselves, then tried to play the victim," he said.
The department's personnel file on Eichhorn, who earns $48,000 a
year, is filled with letters of praise. She has worked as a
prostitution decoy and a hostage negotiator, and once wrestled a box
of razor blades away from a person threatening suicide.
"She is the best sergeant within the police department and should
become the next lieutenant," her supervisor wrote in a job review in
2003.
"Sgt. Eichhorn is a good officer," Pavlis said Tuesday.
He urged her not to file the lawsuit, he said, but there was nothing
he could do.
The Cosmillos have not given the suit much attention, they say.
Richard Cosmillo is busy looking after Joey, whose name he had
tattooed over his heart a few days after the accident, when doctors
told the family the boy would survive only a few hours.
But Joey, now almost 23 months old, has survived. He can smile, and
he appears to recognize music, his grandparents say. His grandfather
hopes for much more.
"Joey is a Roman gladiator. He is an absolute warrior," Richard
Cosmillo said. "There isn't anything or anyone in this world that I
love as much as him."
Rene Stutzman can be reached at rstutzman@orlandosentinel.com or
407-324-7294.
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