Houston police are investigating after a baby girl was dropped off Monday at a Houston fire station in Northline.

A person who wasn’t related to the 10-month-old, named Kylie, brought her to Houston Fire Station 58 around 5:20 p.m., police said.

The baby found her way to the fire station sometime after a family friend began taking care of her, according to the Houston Police Department. The girl's father had been arrested on an unrelated charge, and the family friend was also concerned of possible neglect by Kylie's mother.

The family friend watched the baby until he had to go to work. He left Kylie in the care of his mother, who took the girl to the fire station, at 10413 Fulton, police said.

The girl didn’t seem to be in any distress, fire department officials tweeted. She was taken to the Greater Heights Hospital for evaluation, and Texas Child Protective Services has been notified.

The child is currently in foster care. CPS won an emergency custody hearing today, spokeswoman Tiffani Butler said.

No charges have been filed at this time. The family friend and his mother are considered witnesses in the case, police said.

Under Texas’ “Baby Moses Law,” fire stations are designated “safe havens” where parents can legally leave their infants without fear of prosecution, and no questions asked. The child must be 60 days old or younger, as well as unharmed. They must be handed directly to an employee and not left on a doorstep.

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