Huddersfield Daily Examiner

Mum sentenced for leaving two children at home

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when the older girl woke at 8.30am she searched the house for her missing mother, prosecutor Alex Bozman said.

He told magistrate­s at the Huddersfie­ld court: “She spoke to her by telephone and the defendant told her to go back to bed and that she’d gone to collect a parcel.

“The daughter had trouble with the phone and, as a consequenc­e, she accidental­ly dialled 999 and hung up.

“That caused police to register it as a dropped 999 call and a police caller rang back the landline several times.”

The little girl answered one of the calls and told the operator that she’d called by mistake.

But police felt it was appropriat­e to attend at the house and officers arrived just after 9am.

The girl answered the door and her mother arrived back at 9.15am.

Mr Bozman said: “There was a large empty drum blocking the back door and there was a large bolt which would have been inaccessib­le to the children.

“The defendant said she thought her children would be safer in the house than taking them out with her.

“She said she taught her daughter how to dial 999 in an emergency and felt that she was responsibl­e enough to be left in charge of her brother.

“The defendant said they knew there was a spare key on the coat hook and they would have been able to unlock the back door by standing on the kitchen chair to remove the bolt.”

The mother claimed that she didn’t regularly leave the children unattended.

Magistrate­s were told that she had a previous similar conviction on her record.

She told them that on that occasion she needed to get to work and the babysitter was running late so she left the children alone for a short time.

Social Services had investigat­ed the matter but had been content to release the siblings back to her care, the court heard.

The mum, who was not represente­d, told magistrate­s: “I am very sorry, I made an error of judgement.

“It was raining that day and I thought they’d be better in the house where it was warm than out in the rain.

“I just try my best to be a good mother to them.”

Magistrate­s gave her a conditiona­l discharge for two years, meaning that she will not be punished if she stays out of trouble for this period.

She will still have to pay £85 court costs and £20 victim surcharge.

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