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  • Nailah Winkfield, the mother of Jahi McMath, the Oakland teen...

    Nailah Winkfield, the mother of Jahi McMath, the Oakland teen whose brain-death case captivated the world, spoke at a press conference alongside her attorney Christopher Dolan (left), Jahi’s uncle Omari Sealey, and Jahi’s stepfather Marvin Winkfield, in San Francisco, Calif., Tuesday, July 32, 2018. (Karl Mondon/Bay Area News Group)

  • Nailah Winkfield, the mother of Jahi McMath, the Oakland teen...

    Nailah Winkfield, the mother of Jahi McMath, the Oakland teen whose brain-death case captivated the world, spoke at a press conference alongside her husband and Jahi’s stepfather Marvin Winkfield, in San Francisco, Calif., Tuesday, July 32, 2018. (Karl Mondon/Bay Area News Group)

  • Nailah Winkfield, the mother of Jahi McMath, the Oakland teen...

    Nailah Winkfield, the mother of Jahi McMath, the Oakland teen whose brain-death case captivated the world, wipes away a tear at a press conference alongside Jahi’s uncle, Omari Sealey, in San Francisco, Calif., Tuesday, July 32, 2018. (Karl Mondon/Bay Area News Group)

  • Nailah Winkfield, the mother of Jahi McMath, the Oakland teen...

    Nailah Winkfield, the mother of Jahi McMath, the Oakland teen whose brain-death case captivated the world, spoke at a press conference alongside her attorney Christopher Dolan (left), Jahi’s uncle Omari Sealey, and Jahi’s stepfather Marvin Winkfield, in San Francisco, Calif., Tuesday, July 32, 2018. (Karl Mondon/Bay Area News Group)

  • Nailah Winkfield, the mother of Jahi McMath, the Oakland teen...

    Nailah Winkfield, the mother of Jahi McMath, the Oakland teen whose brain-death case captivated the world, spoke at a press conference alongside her attorney Christopher Dolan in San Francisco, Calif., Tuesday, July 32, 2018. They spoke in front of a projected image of Jahi’s two death certificates, one from New Jersey (left) and one from California. (Karl Mondon/Bay Area News Group)

  • Jahi McMath’s image is projected behind her mother, Nailah Winkfield,...

    Jahi McMath’s image is projected behind her mother, Nailah Winkfield, and attorney Christopher Dolan during a press conference in San Francisco, Calif., Tuesday, July 32, 2018. (Karl Mondon/Bay Area News Group)

  • In this Oct. 2, 2014 file photo Christopher Dolan, attorney...

    In this Oct. 2, 2014 file photo Christopher Dolan, attorney for Jahi McMath’s family, shows a photo of the 13-year-old Oakland girl during a press conference at Dolan Law Firm in San Francisco, Calif. Dolan showed photos and a pair of videos where McMatth moves her foot and arm as a response to the voice of her mother Nailah Winkfield in a home in New Jersey. She was declared brain dead in California after tonsil, throat and nose surgeries to relieve her sleep apnea. (Ray Chavez/Bay Area News Group)

  • In this Oct. 2, 2014 file photo newspaper reporters grab...

    In this Oct. 2, 2014 file photo newspaper reporters grab printouts of the 13-year-old Oakland girl Jahi McMath during a press conference at Dolan Law Firm in San Francisco, Calif. Christopher Dolan, attorney for McMath’s family, showed photos and a pair of videos where McMatth moves her foot and arm as a response to the voice of her mother Nailah Winkfield in a home in New Jersey. She was declared brain dead in California after tonsil, throat and nose surgeries to relieve her sleep apnea. (Ray Chavez/Bay Area News Group)

  • In this Jan. 13, 2014 file photo Nailah Winkfield, left,...

    In this Jan. 13, 2014 file photo Nailah Winkfield, left, mother of 13-year-old Jahi McMath, is comforted as she talks to the media outside Children’s Hospital Oakland in Oakland, Calif.

  • Chris Dolan, right, attorney for the family of 13-year-old Jahi...

    Chris Dolan, right, attorney for the family of 13-year-old Jahi McMath, conducts a press conference with uncle Omari Sealey, left, and grandmother Sandra Chatman outside Children’s Hospital Oakland, Monday, Dec. 30, 2013 in Oakland, Calif. A judge granted an injunction to the family to keep the girl, who is brain-dead, on a ventilator until at least Jan. 7. (D. Ross Cameron/Bay Area News Group)

  • Children’s Hospital Oakland spokesperson Sam Singer, left, speaks to media...

    Children’s Hospital Oakland spokesperson Sam Singer, left, speaks to media about the case of 13-year-old Jahi McMath, Monday, Dec. 30, 2013 in Oakland, Calif. (D. Ross Cameron/Bay Area News Group)

  • Omari Sealy, left, uncle of 13-year-old Jahi McMath, and family...

    Omari Sealy, left, uncle of 13-year-old Jahi McMath, and family attorney Chris Dolan walk with an unidentified person to news conference outside Children’s Hospital in Oakland, Calif., to announce that Sealy’s niece will be moved to an undisclosed location in the Bay Area on Thursday, Dec. 26, 2013. McMath has been declared brain dead after she went into Children’s Hospital to have her tonsils out.

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Pictured is Joseph Geha, who covers Fremont, Newark and Union City for the Fremont Argus. For his Wordpress profile and social media. (Michael Malone/Bay Area News Group)
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Through tears, the mother of an Oakland teenager who was removed from breathing machines almost five years after being declared brain dead, said Tuesday she would fight all over again to try to save her daughter.

“I gave up everything for Jahi, and I have no regrets. Not one,” Nailah Winkfield said about her deceased daughter, Jahi McMath. “The only regret I ever had was bringing her to the hospital to get her tonsils removed.”

During a press conference in the San Francisco office of her attorney, Christopher Dolan, she said she’s heartbroken and feels lost but is also proud because McMath beat everyone’s expectations.

“She defied all the odds. When they said Jahi would only last for two weeks, Jahi lived four-and-a-half years,” she said.

Winkfield’s comments came almost two weeks after McMath — whose case grabbed worldwide attention in 2013 — succumbed to bleeding, liver failure and complications from her severe brain injury at Robert Wood Johnson University Hospital in New Brunswick, N.J. on June 22. She was 17.

Winkfield quit her job, sold her house and left her other children and family behind to move to New Jersey in 2013 with McMath, who was declared brain dead by UCSF Benioff Children’s Hospital Oakland doctors following complications from a nose and throat operation.

New Jersey is the only U.S. state where families can reject brain-death diagnosis on religious grounds.

“My child was never dead, she was always alive. And I thank God that the state of New Jersey recognized that,” Winkfield said.

“I don’t know what my life is going to be like anymore, because everything I did revolved around Jahi,” Winkfield said while wiping away tears.

“I want to paint her nails, and I want to comb her hair and brush her teeth and talk to her and watch TV with her and let her know what’s on TV. And I can’t do that no more,” she said.

Winkfield spoke at the conference along with her brother Omari Sealey, her husband Marvin Winkfield and Dolan.

She told of her last moments with her daughter. On June 22, just ahead of a surgery, Winkfield she she noticed McMath looking sick in her bed.

“She didn’t have that same look that she always had that I looked for. And so I spoke with her and I said ‘Jahi, if you’re ready to go, and you’re tired, you don’t have to do this for me.’ I said ‘you have my permission.’ ”

A few hours later McMath’s heart stopped and doctors tried unsuccessfully to revive her. Then they removed the ventilator, Winkfield said.

“It was so weird not seeing her on it. It was so quiet when I went to see her to say goodbye to her. I guess I hadn’t heard that much silence in four-and-a-half years…I felt that she was at peace,” Winkfield said.

“I told her of course that I loved her and how amazing she was. And I said ‘Jahi, I’m so proud of you to decide to leave this earth on your own, and not letting some hospital take you out,’ ” Winkfield said.

“I’m so proud for that. Because she really fixed them,” Winkfield said. “She showed them, ‘You will not kill me, I will leave here myself.’ ”

The family will hold funeral services for McMath at Acts Full Gospel Church on Friday morning and she will be buried at a Hayward cemetery, Dolan said.

But the legal battles stemming from the controversy over McMath’s diagnoses — a federal court case seeking to correct the record about when McMath died, and a malpractice and wrongful death case filed in California — may continue for years, Dolan said.

He noted because McMath has died, the malpractice element of the state case will likely be nullified. He said the death certificate for McMath from Alameda County listing her date of death as Dec. 12, 2013, “isn’t worth the paper it’s printed on,” as a doctor didn’t sign it.

Dolan added that an autopsy was performed on McMath in New Jersey, and the death certificate from that state lists causes for her death on June 22 as bleeding, hypovolemic shock, liver failure, and a serious brain injury.

McMath’s case could also have lasting impact on the medical community.

In April, her case headlined Harvard Medical School Center for Bioethics’ annual conference, marking the 50th anniversary of the landmark report that set the medical standard defining brain death.

Winkfield said she feels her daughter — who she spent years caring for around the clock with the aid of nurses — waited to make sure she would be OK before passing.

“And so I have to be, because I promised her that I will be alright, and I don’t want to lie to her.”

After taking some time to put her life back together, Winkfield said she wants to become an advocate and change laws worldwide so no other parent will ever feel they don’t have a choice in whether their child lives or dies.

“Stop pulling the plug on your people,” she said Tuesday. “Stop letting the doctors tell you to prematurely disconnect your family members.”

Winkfield said she wants her daughter’s case to create lasting change, and is proud McMath has already brought so much attention to the issue of brain death, and the choices families have.

“Most people have to stand up and do what I’m doing to get heard. Jahi got heard with silence,” she said.

“That little black girl from Oakland made history.”

Staff writer David DeBolt contributed to this story. 

Below are copies of both death certificates provided by Christopher Dolan.