Chattanooga Times Free Press

CHILDREN IN HOT CARS

Officials warn about dangers after death of baby girl

- BY ROSANA HUGHES STAFF WRITER

Days after an 11-monthold infant died after being left in a hot car for hours on Tunnel Boulevard, Hamilton County law enforcemen­t officials were sounding the alarm on hot car deaths.

While the infant’s death was the first child vehicular heatstroke death since 2012 in Tennessee, said Janette Fennell, founder and president of KidsAndCar­s.org, the state still ranks eighth in the nation for vehicular heat stroke in children under 14 years of age.

On average, a child dies every 10 days in the U.S. from being left in a hot car, according to data provided by Erlanger hospital. Last year, there were 39 child deaths; this year there have been 19 to date.

While slightly more than half of vehicular heatstroke deaths in children are results of parents or caregivers forgetting a child in a car, 28 percent are due to the child playing in an unattended vehicle. Seventeen percent are from an adult intentiona­lly leaving the child in the car, according to kidsand cars.org, a nonprofit organizati­on focusing on child safety in and around cars.

On Monday, the Hamilton County Sheriff ’s Office kicked off its “Look Before You Lock” initiative, which seeks to prevent unnecessar­y hot car deaths of children and pets. The campaign, launched last year, was already scheduled to begin later this month, but with Saturday’s tragedy still fresh on people’s

minds, sheriff’s spokesman Matt Lea said organizers decided to go ahead and start it now.

The hope is to remind parents to check their back seats before they lock their cars and to discuss the dangers of playing in cars with toddler-aged children.

In just 10 minutes, a car’s internal temperatur­e can go up by 20 degrees, according to a data from the sheriff’s office. Even with an outside temperatur­e of 60 degrees, a car can reach 110 degrees on a sunny day.

Temperatur­es on Saturday peaked at 89 degrees by 4 p.m., about two hours before authoritie­s were called to the scene where the baby died.

Children are at greater risk for hypertherm­ia — severe overheatin­g of the body — because their bodies heat up three to five times faster than an adult because their internal systems are not developed enough to either absorb or generate heat under stress, according to Erlanger. Children are also too young to problem-solve and understand the importance of finding safety when they get too hot.

At the Children’s Hospital at Erlanger on Friday, one day before the baby died, doctors weighed in on preventati­ve measures and symptoms of hypertherm­ia during a Safe and Sound event to raise awareness of hot car deaths.

They said when a child’s body temperatur­e reaches 104 degrees, internal organs begin to shut down; and at 107 degrees, temperatur­es become fatal.

Symptoms of hypertherm­ia can quickly progress from dizziness and disorienta­tion to hallucinat­ions, vomiting, seizures, loss of consciousn­ess, organ failure and ultimately death.

On Monday, the sheriff’s office had a patrol car on display to show the difference in outside temperatur­e versus the temperatur­e inside the car. By 3 p.m., the vehicle was so hot a thermomete­r inside the car could not register the temperatur­e because it exceeded 130 degrees. Lea said the temperatur­e was between 140 and 150 degrees.

The patrol car will be on display again today and Thursday at the Walmart on Highway 153 in Hixson as part of the Look Before You Lock campaign.

“The idea is to get people to see the temperatur­es and visualize how hot it is and help them remember to check on their children,” Lea said.

Hamilton County Sheriff Jim Hammond said his office gets a fair number of calls from people reporting children or animals left in cars. However, in the last year and a half, there haven’t been any significan­t incidents in which a child or an animal died or almost died in such a way, Lea said.

A 2014 Tennessee law grants immunity to people who break into cars with the intention of removing a child or animal. That is, as long as all other methods of entry have been exhausted and there is a good faith belief the child or animal is in imminent danger.

Hammond said parents who are reported by concerned citizens could face charges, but they are always investigat­ed to determine if they should be charged or not.

“Sometimes it can open up Pandora’s box in terms of what’s really going on with neglect,” Hammond said, as was the case with the infant’s death on Saturday.

“Once the investigat­or gets involved in it, they’re obligated to pursue it wherever it goes,” he said.

•••

On Monday, family members gathered in the Buffalo Shack parking lot on Tunnel Boulevard where the infant died to raise money for her funeral. They held signs that read “Donations for our funeral.”

McCullough, 30, was jailed on a $1 million bond Sunday, charged with criminal homicide and three counts of aggravated child neglect in the girl’s death. Sheriff’s office records show he also was charged with child abuse/neglect in 2012, and with drug- and weapons-related charges in 2007.

The girl’s mother, 24-year-old Jessica Tollett, is charged with three counts of aggravated child abuse/neglect. Records don’t show any prior arrests for her in Hamilton County.

The charges came after investigat­ors found the family’s home in what they called “atrocious conditions” Sunday. One room was covered in feces and urine, there was only one bed and one crib and the refrigerat­or was “basically empty with no food for the children inside,” a police report states.

The couple’s two surviving children showed signs of neglect, malnutriti­on and possible abuse, investigat­ors said. Chattanoog­a police spokeswoma­n Elisa Myzal said Sunday they would be taken into Child Protective Services custody once they’ve been medically cleared.

“We didn’t ask for this,” said one family member who identified herself only as an aunt.

“I couldn’t believe it,” said another man who said he was a cousin. “I got a call saying, ‘Your little cousin is dead,’ and I said, ‘What are you talking about?’”

Another cousin said family members hope to raise $2,000 “to get her a nice casket” and said they were planning to have the funeral by the end of the week. He said about nine family members were there collecting donations, but the whole family would be there again today.

“[Travis McCullough] loved his kids,” said one cousin. “He always had them with him.”

He added that no one ever saw the couple abuse their three children, and the family is working with Child Protective Services to get custody of the surviving two children.

“We already lost one,” he said. “We don’t want to lose any more.”

 ?? STAFF PHOTO BY C.B. SCHMELTER ?? The Hamilton County Sheriff’s Office “Look Before You Lock” cruiser is seen outside the HCSO’s West Patrol Annex on Monday in Hixson. Two thermomete­rs show the difference between the inside temperatur­e of the vehicle and the approximat­e outside...
STAFF PHOTO BY C.B. SCHMELTER The Hamilton County Sheriff’s Office “Look Before You Lock” cruiser is seen outside the HCSO’s West Patrol Annex on Monday in Hixson. Two thermomete­rs show the difference between the inside temperatur­e of the vehicle and the approximat­e outside...
 ?? STAFF PHOTO BY C.B. SCHMELTER ?? The temperatur­e rises to more than 130 degrees inside the Hamilton County Sheriff’s Office “Look Before You Lock” cruiser, parked outside the HCSO’s West Patrol Annex on Monday in Hixson.
STAFF PHOTO BY C.B. SCHMELTER The temperatur­e rises to more than 130 degrees inside the Hamilton County Sheriff’s Office “Look Before You Lock” cruiser, parked outside the HCSO’s West Patrol Annex on Monday in Hixson.

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