Re: Two Toddlers Die in Hot Car
- From: ktmunn@xxxxxxx
- Date: Mon, 30 Jun 2008 12:07:14 -0700 (PDT)
On Jun 29, 11:56 am, "tiny dancer" <tinydancer...@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx>
wrote:
Photo's at link posted below:
Neighbors recount frantic search, tragic discovery
MANNS HARBOR, N.C.
The temperature inside the car was 135 degrees.
No one is quite sure how long Amy Cooper's toddler daughters were trapped in
the two-tone Mercury Topaz that sat in their neighbor's driveway. But by the
time sheriff's deputies found them in the back seat Friday afternoon, it was
too late.
The 18-month-old died shortly after. The 2-year-old died early Saturday
morning.
"It just appears to be a very tragic accident," Dare County Sheriff's Lt.
Bill Godley said. "Everybody that was involved in this was touched. We had
two young children who just died right there."
The girls, whose names the Sheriff's Department refused to release Saturday,
had been playing with their 4-year-old brother outside their family's
trailer off rural Ina Waterfield Road when they climbed into the unlocked
car Friday. They were unable to get out.
On a day that hit 91 degrees in Manteo, the nearest town, temperatures
inside the inoperable car caused first heatstroke and then hyperthermia.
Children - especially younger ones - are especially susceptible because
their bodies are not able to cool themselves as well as adults'.
"There's going to be lethal temperatures within a half-hour, definitely,"
said Jan Null, a San Francisco-based meteorologist who studies children's
hyperthermia deaths in cars.
The girls were the 11th and 12th children in the nation this year to die
from hyperthermia after being trapped in a vehicle. Four of those deaths
have been in North Carolina, according to statistics kept by Null.
Down the dirt road, Javan Eaton was watching television Friday afternoon
when her neighbor ran by, screaming.
"My children. I can't find my girls!" Cooper yelled.
Eaton leapt up and joined the search, and the road quickly filled with
sheriff's deputies and neighbors.
The first place everyone looked was the water of Croatan Sound, a few
hundred yards away.
Eaton waded in and walked the shoreline.
"Come home! We're gonna have a tea party!" Eaton hollered. It was, she said,
"anything you could think of to entice a child."
Next door, Rita Mann saw another neighbor run to the water.
"I thought, dear Lord, something must have happened, because he was
frantic," she said. Her grandson ran out on his family's dock, scanning the
gentle waves for the two toddlers.
The Manns own a swath of land that stretches a mile from the waterfront,
living on the shoreline while renting out several house trailers behind
them. They rented a yellow trailer on a dirt road to Amy Cooper on June 9,
Mann said.
After receiving a call about the missing children at 2:50 p.m., deputies
spread out across what Godley called the "maze" of trailers, vehicles and
people on the Mann s' property.
In the chaos, the girls' brother, upset by the commotion and his mother's
worry, was unable to tell anyone where his sisters had gone, Godley said.
"He was 4 years old," Godley said. "You can't get much."
It was a deputy who looked in the back seat of an inoperable Topaz sitting
in Alfredo Flores' unshaded driveway, only feet from the toddlers' home.
Deputies pulled the pair from the car and began CPR, Godley said. The
18-month-old was pronounced dead at Outer Banks Hospital in Nags Head. The
older girl, who responded to first aid, was taken to Children's Hospital of
The King's Daughters in Norfolk for treatment but died around 3 a.m.
Saturday.
Deputies are continuing to investigate, Godley said.
On Saturday, a pink rubber shoe lay in the yard outside of Cooper's trailer
home, its match floating in a kiddie pool nearby.
A child -size Dora the Explorer chair sat under a canopy tent, amid other
toys and scooters.
Cooper's family wasn't home. They had moved in only a few weeks ago, and her
neighbors said they hardly knew her or her family, only enough to see the
children playing in the yard at times.
Next door, Flores, who hadn't been home Friday afternoon, tried to make
sense of what happened inside the car he was hoping to fix up.
"The babies - they OK?" he asked.
He lowered his eyes at the answer.
The phone at the Manns' house rang steadily.
"The other one didn't make it," Mann told her caller, shaking her head.
And Eaton, her hands still shaking from the previous day's worry, said quiet
Manns Harbor wouldn't be the same.
"None of us are going to get over this anytime soon," Eaton said. "It's just
devastating."
http://hamptonroads.com/2008/06/second-toddler-trapped-hot-car-north-...
The young mother in this story works for my mother, I also went to
high school with her and know her sister!! these comments on here are
heartbreaking and I hope neither her nor her family see them!! I agree
allowing your young children to play outside without proper
supervision is wrong I myself have a 4 year old who I never allow to
leave my sight!! The investigation is pending at this time and who
knows she may go to jail but nothing can be worse than the 2 life
sentences handed down to her now over the loss of her two beautiful
daughters!! only amy and god know the truth about what happened that
day!! we should be praying for the family not judgeing them:(
.
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