Houston Chronicle

Toddler is abandoned on neighbor’s porch

Father angry that friend of mom left boy alone in Spring

- By Jane Stueckeman­n and Samantha Ketterer STAFF WRITERS

A toddler abandoned on his neighbor’s front porch in Spring was expected to be reunited Thursday night with his family, and the woman who left the boy there could face criminal charges, the Montgomery County Sheriff’s Office said.

The woman — a friend of the child’s mother — was apparently supposed to drop the 2-year-old off at his father’s house in the afternoon, said Lt. Scott Spencer of the sheriff’s office. When that didn’t happen, the father assumed plans had changed and left his residence.

What followed was a series of events that angered the boy’s father and upset many Houstonare­a residents and law enforcemen­t. Surveillan­ce video showed the friend bringing the boy to a neighbor’s house Wednesday night instead of the father’s — and leaving the child alone there at night.

“If that was her child, she wouldn’t have left him,” said the boy’s father, Willie Simmons, as he stood on his doorstop Thursday morning while he spoke with the media. “She ain’t have no business leaving my son right there. I try to hold it in; I can’t hold that in, man. I can’t keep holding that in. Just imagine if my nice neighbors weren’t there. My son would have wandered in the street and got hit. Just imagine nobody would have been there. He just would have been walking.”

Deputies were called to the 30700 block of Legends Ridge Drive in Spring around 8:20 p.m. after the homeowner discovered the toddler on her doorstep without an adult.

Video surveillan­ce showed the woman arriving at the home while she carried the boy by one arm. She knocked on the door and rang the doorbell before leaving the boy on the step, along with two bags she’d also been carrying, Spencer said.

The whole incident lasted 23 seconds.

Not on the run

The woman left the scene in a white passenger car. She hasn’t spoken to authoritie­s, but the sheriff ’s office now knows her identity, Spencer said at a news conference. She was originally described as being in her mid-20s to early 30s.

Officials don’t believe that she is on the run from the law at this time.

Authoritie­s found the father after a member of the news media saw him leaving his residence Thursday and asked if he knew anything about the boy, Spencer said. He watched the video and recognized the child as his son.

Law enforcemen­t knocked on every door nearby, including the father’s, after the child was found alone, Spencer said. The father wasn’t home at the time.

Simmons said the woman’s actions Wednesday night were upsetting. “They done that for excitement ... cause she’s laughing. On the camera she’s laughing, he’s a toy, like it’s a joke.”

“Every time I watch that video I’m upset. You don’t do that.”

The mother of the child was in the hospital during the incident and was discharged Thursday morning. She believed she was handing the boy to a responsibl­e adult, Spencer said.

Simmon’s next-door neighbor said she thought the incident was a “miscommuni­cation.”

“I just thought maybe our dog had gotten out. It was late, and our neighbors have kids and I thought it was something neighborly,” said the woman, who requested to be identified as Mary. When (the child) didn’t have an adult, we knocked on the doors and nobody was home, so we reviewed the video and saw that he’d been left and then we called the police.

“But it was always, we think this is just a wrong-house situation,” she said. “Nobody thought it was totally random. It was more like, he belongs to somebody close by. It was a miscommuni­cation.”

CPS takes child

Child Protective Services took custody of the 2-year-old, who is doing well and doesn’t seem to be aware of what happened, Spencer said.

The boy is in foster care, waiting to be reunited with his family.

“I can confirm that CPS is investigat­ing and the child is safe, healthy, no signs of abuse and is happy,” said Tejal Patel, spokeswoma­n of the Department of Family and Protective Services for the Greater Houston area.

She later stated the child would be brought home Thursday night with his mother.

The woman in the video could face charges of child abandonmen­t, a third-degree felony.

She hadn’t been interviewe­d by authoritie­s at the time of the press conference.

“I can confirm that CPS is investigat­ing, and the child is safe, healthy, no signs of abuse and is happy.”

Teja Patel, Department of Family and Protective Services spokeswoma­n

 ?? Jason Fochtman / Staff photograph­er ?? Willie Simmons, the father of a 2-year-old boy who was dropped off at the wrong house, listens as Lt. Scott Spencer of the Montgomery County Sheriff's Office speaks about the incident.
Jason Fochtman / Staff photograph­er Willie Simmons, the father of a 2-year-old boy who was dropped off at the wrong house, listens as Lt. Scott Spencer of the Montgomery County Sheriff's Office speaks about the incident.
 ?? Jason Fochtman / Staff photograph­er ?? Willie Simmons, the father of a 2-year-old boy who was dropped off at the wrong house in Spring, said he was angry. “Just imagine if my nice neighbors weren’t there,” he said.
Jason Fochtman / Staff photograph­er Willie Simmons, the father of a 2-year-old boy who was dropped off at the wrong house in Spring, said he was angry. “Just imagine if my nice neighbors weren’t there,” he said.

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