Boy forgotten in hot vehicle found dead
08:59 PM CDT on Wednesday, August 20, 2003
By MICHAEL GRABELL / The Dallas Morning News
DUNCANVILLE An 8-month-old boy who spent most of the day in the back of a Chevrolet Suburban after being forgotten by a day-care center driver was found dead Wednesday afternoon, police said.
The boy's death was the second in three months in which a child under the care of day-care workers has died in a hot vehicle.
Officials of T&T Tots Day Care & Learning Center in the Red Bird area of Dallas called the driver to tell him that the boy had not been dropped off at the day-care center after being picked up at his home at 7:30 a.m., Dallas police said.
At 2:30 p.m., the boy's grandmother went to the day-care center to pick up the child, who was not there.
The driver discovered the boy about 3:30 p.m. while he was parked at Central Elementary School in Duncanville, waiting to pick up other children.
"The grandmother this afternoon went to the day care to pick the child up, and the child was missing," said Dallas police Sgt. Hollis Edwards. "From there, someone from the day care called the driver, and that's when the child was found. He turned himself in to Duncanville police."
The driver, whose name was not released by police, flagged down a passing patrol car and told an officer that there was a child who was not breathing in the back of his vehicle.
Tonya Scott of Duncanville said she was picking up her niece and nephew at the school when the man realized that the baby was in the back of his vehicle. She said the man was frantic.
"He was totally disturbed, totally disturbed," Ms. Scott said. "He was hitting his head on the concrete, rolling around on the ground. They had to calm him down."
Ms. Scott said she and another woman tried to perform CPR on the child, but it was too late.
Crime scene investigators were collecting evidence from the vehicle late Wednesday. The Dallas County medical examiner pronounced the child dead at the scene and will perform an autopsy.
Temperatures hit 90 degrees across the Dallas area by 11 a.m. Wednesday, according to the National Weather Service in Fort Worth. The day's high at Dallas/Fort Worth International Airport was 99 degrees, set about 4:15 p.m.
At Executive Airport in Dallas, temperatures were slightly lower, but the heat index was a consistent 102 to 103 degrees across the region. A heat advisory is in effect until Thursday evening.
On May 30, Alan Devon Brown was left in a day-care van for two hours before workers realized he was missing. He died four days later.
Two workers and a dozen children at Little Dudes and Daisies Daycare and Learning Center in Lancaster were returning from a trip to a Chuck E. Cheese's restaurant when 2-year-old Alan was left in the van on a day when the temperature hit 100 degrees. The center has since closed. Day-care director Onetha Kizzee Conners, 48, and employee Jimmie Ree Smith, 42, were indicted Tuesday on injury to a child charges.
In July, Mafi Manu died July 11 in her family's unlocked minivan as temperatures hit 96 degrees and heat indexes topped 102. The minivan was parked outside the Hurst family's home. No charges were filed in the incident, in which police determined that the girl had climbed into the vehicle.
The Texas Department of Protective and Regulatory Services' child-care licensing division, which regulates day-care centers, will begin an investigation of the Duncanville incident Thursday, said Marleigh Meisner, an agency spokeswoman.
T&T Tots Day Care & Learning Center was first licensed in 1996. In 2002 and 2003 inspections, investigators found several violations. Most were related to record keeping, and none pertained directly to supervision.
Officials warned anyone taking care of children to be careful in the heat.
"Count how many kids you've got going in, count how many kids that go out, double-check. Do everything you can to be sure that you've got everyone out of that vehicle," said Duncanville city spokesman Keith Bilbrey. "It's very dangerous. ... It can reach extreme temperatures inside the vehicle."
Terrill Streetman, executive director of Kids In Cars, said deaths in hot cars are completely avoidable. The nonprofit agency based in Missouri works to educate people about the dangers of leaving children alone in and around cars. So far this year, he said, about 35 children have died in hot cars. Despite well-publicized incidents, parents and caregivers still leave children inside vehicles.
"I think it's a lack of knowledge," Mr. Streetman said. "The vehicle acts as an oven, and temperatures rise quickly. A lot of people don't realize that children's systems can't dissipate the heat like an adult's."
Staff writers Jaime Jordan, Terri Langford and Ian McCann contributed to this report.

How stupid can people be? I mean really?
This really annoys me that people can be THIS stupid to leave th eir kids in a hot car on a summer's day in TEXAS where it regularly reaches over 100 degrees! Geez people get on the danged clue bus for once in your stupid lives!