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ATL - Toddler Left in Car
Posted on 6/19/14 at 9:29 am
Posted on 6/19/14 at 9:29 am
Posted on 6/19/14 at 9:30 am to CBLSU316
As a fairly new parent this is probably my biggest fear.
I can't imagine what they would feel like to be the guilty parent.
I can't imagine what they would feel like to be the guilty parent.
Posted on 6/19/14 at 9:30 am to CBLSU316
ugh...I hate reading these stories. Gut wrenching.
Posted on 6/19/14 at 9:31 am to CBLSU316
I'm not especially sympathetic when this happens usually, but the guy's reaction here sounds like it was one of total desperation and guilt.
Posted on 6/19/14 at 9:31 am to CBLSU316
You cannot even satirize this shite. My god.
quote:
According to Cobb County police, the father of the toddler was supposed to drop the baby off at daycare, but forgot. The father then drove to work around 9 a.m. Wednesday and left the baby in the car. It wasn't until the man left work and started driving home that he looked in the backseat and saw the child still strapped in the car seat and unresponsive.
Posted on 6/19/14 at 9:31 am to CBLSU316
No way I am clicking on that.
Posted on 6/19/14 at 9:32 am to okietiger
I just don't see how this is possible
Posted on 6/19/14 at 9:32 am to CBLSU316
Horrible situation all around. I've gotten 10 minutes down the road before, when my toddler finally said something from the back seat and I remembered I forgot to take her to the babysitters. Morning mind fogs suck.
Posted on 6/19/14 at 9:33 am to PuntBamaPunt
quote:
Forgetting a child in the back seat of a hot, parked car is a horrifying, inexcusable mistake. But is it a crime?
Yes, but it should be punished like any other crime of extreme negligence.
Posted on 6/19/14 at 9:33 am to Pettifogger
quote:
I'm not especially sympathetic when this happens usually, but the guy's reaction here sounds like it was one of total desperation and guilt.
These almost always happen because some little change occurs in the parent(s)' normal routine. Awful.
Posted on 6/19/14 at 9:33 am to okietiger
quote:
As a fairly new parent this is probably my biggest fear.
I can't imagine what they would feel like to be the guilty parent.
I have an 8 year old and a 2 year old, but when they were both infants, I developed an OCD habit of checking the carseat in the back seat of my car to make sure I had not left them in there.
Posted on 6/19/14 at 9:33 am to The Third Leg
Damn, I almost puked just reading that quote.
I have nightmares about this as a new parent. I have started making a habit of looking in the backseat every single time I get out of a car. I was doing it all this week and I'm not even home.
My stomach is still in my throat.
I have nightmares about this as a new parent. I have started making a habit of looking in the backseat every single time I get out of a car. I was doing it all this week and I'm not even home.
My stomach is still in my throat.
Posted on 6/19/14 at 9:34 am to okietiger
quote:
As a fairly new parent this is probably my biggest fear.
Truly horrible. Not sure how you'd live with yourself after that.
Posted on 6/19/14 at 9:35 am to okietiger
quote:
These almost always happen because some little change occurs in the parent(s)' normal routine. Awful.
We don't have a kid yet, but we take our dog to "school" everyday (yuppie I know). He's loud so it's easy to remember, but we both usually check the backseat and talk to each other after getting to work to recap the dropoff.
I think that would probably be a decent system for stuff like this, because I'm pretty paranoid about it (I'm sure it'll go through the roof when I have kids).
Posted on 6/19/14 at 9:35 am to GOON
The # of incidents notably increased when they required car seats to be moved from the passenger seat to the back and that infant car seats be turned around facing the rear.
Posted on 6/19/14 at 9:37 am to CBLSU316
It's a father's worst nightmare. Chills.
Posted on 6/19/14 at 9:38 am to Pettifogger
quote:
Yes, but it should be punished like any other crime of extreme negligence.
Safe to say he isn't leaving another kid in a car. So what's the point in wasting jail space on him?
Posted on 6/19/14 at 9:39 am to okietiger
quote:
As a fairly new parent this is probably my biggest fear.
Ways to Help Prevent a Tragedy
Several products are available to remind a parent if a child remains in a car seat after the car is turned off. One of the more popular is Cars-N-Kids Car Seat Monitor, which turns on upon sensing a child's weight and sounds a lullaby when the car has stopped; it retails for about $40 and is available online.
KidsAndCars.org, an advocacy group for child vehicle safety, urges some basic measures to prevent the tragedy of children being inadvertently left in vehicles:
Always put something you'll need for work -- cellphone, handbag, employee badge, etc. -- on the floor of the back seat, near the child.
Keep a large teddy bear in the child's car seat when it's not occupied. When the child is placed in the seat, put the teddy bear up front in the passenger seat. It's a visual reminder that anytime the teddy bear is in the passenger seat, the child is in the back.
Make arrangements with your child's day-care provider or babysitter that you will always call them if your child will not be there on a particular day as scheduled. Ask them to always phone you if your child does not show up when expected.
Posted on 6/19/14 at 9:40 am to okietiger
quote:
These almost always happen because some little change occurs in the parent(s)' normal routine. Awful.
Yep and everyone here will say I always check the backseat, or this couldn't happen to me.
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