Parents charged after child found in hot car in Tennessee

Orysia Mccabe
By Orysia Mccabe
July 10, 2017US News
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Parents charged after child found in hot car in Tennessee

Parents of three children were charged with child neglect and the father was charged with criminal homicide after a baby was found dead in a hot car in Chattanooga, Tennessee.

The father, Travis McCullough, 30, was arrested before in August 2012 on charges of child abuse and neglect, the Hamilton County Sheriff’s Office said, according to the Times Free Press.

For the incident over the weekend, he faces charges of criminal homicide and three counts of aggravated assault.

His other children were found dirty, malnourished, and showed signs of abuse. They were taken by Child Protective Services, the publication reported.

A woman who called the police to report an 11-month child’s death said she heard McCullough cry for help. When she approached him in her car, he “tossed the lifeless victim who was completely unclothed into her arms and fled the scene,” the affidavit states.

(Chattanooga Police)
(Chattanooga Police)

“[McCullough] left, went over to the gas station, got gas in his car and took off,” Chattanooga Police Department spokeswoman Elisa Myzal told the paper. “There are family members that he dropped the other two kids off to that then showed back up with those kids. How did those kids survive all day in a car? Nobody knows right now because after answering a few questions, dad lawyered up. It was not established whether he let them out, they got out, or left for a time.”

Consent was approved to get a search warrant of the family residence, and investigators said the living conditions were poor. Urine and human waste covered the walls, and there was only one bed and crib inside the home.

The children’s mother, Jessica Tollett, was arrested based on on the living conditions, lack of medical care, lack of food, and visible injuries on the children. She faces three counts of aggravated child abuse or neglect, WBIR reported.

The station reported that the official cause of the death of the deceased infant will be determined by the local medical examiner’s office.

Hot-car-eath-monitoring website Kids and Cars says “on average, 37 children die from heat-related deaths after being trapped inside vehicles. Even the best of parents or caregivers can unknowingly leave a sleeping baby in a car; and the end result can be injury or even death.”

Meanwhile, Noheatstroke.org says that 19 children have died in hot cars so far in 2017. Last year, 39 died.

(Noheatstroke.org)
(Noheatstroke.org)
(Noheatstroke.org screenshot)
(Noheatstroke.org screenshot)

From The Epoch Times

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