Child dies after being left in vehicle; father kills self - oops

CHESTERFIELD, Va. (WWBT) - Chesterfield police are investigating what they say appears to be the “accidental death of a child and subsequent suicide of an adult.”

Officers responded to the 14100 block of Aldengate Road just before noon on Tuesday after receiving a call that a child had been left in a car for several hours and that the father was at the home making suicidal statements.

At the scene, police found a car with its door open in the driveway and a deceased 18-month-child inside the home.

Outside the home, they found the child’s father with an apparent self-inflicted gunshot wound in the woods behind the house. Callers had indicated that the father may kill himself in the woods behind the home.

“As they made entry into the residence, they found a deceased 18-month-old inside,” Lt. Col. Chris Hensley said. “As they continued to check the perimeter of the residence, they found an adult male in the wooded area behind the house deceased from an apparent gunshot wound.”

Police said those calls came from family members who were talking with the father and knew something was off when the child was not at daycare.

Based on their investigation, police believe the father discovered the boy had been left in his car while at work.

They said the 18-month-old was in the car for at least three hours.

Police said the father then drove home, where he took the boy inside before taking his own life.

“This is a horrible tragedy on so many levels, and our hearts go out to the family and friends that are going to deal with this, but we would be remised in not taking the opportunity for people to take this moment and realize how important it is to check your vehicles,” Hensley said.

While the investigation is ongoing, the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration tells parents to always check their entire vehicle before locking the door and walking away.

NHTSA also recommends asking your childcare provider to call if your child doesn’t show up for care as expected.

 
So he either forgot to take his kid to daycare and left them in the car for hours or someone put the kid in the car without informing him. There is way more to this story.
Or the kid put himself in the car in a cute "I'm going to work with dad and I'll surprise him" way only for the dad to have no idea he was hiding in the car.

EDIT - Probably not as per @Potatoherder
 
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Man and I get mad when I leave a crayon in the car. My guess is he probably doesn't usually take the kid to daycare but was asked to before work. This is a great time for the cosmic authors to put a twist in it akin to two kids dying on a railroad track...but they were already dead.
 
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I would've taken it out on the real culprit.
 
There's one of those 4chan greentexts where a guy discusses, in really plain detail, how he thought something bad was going to happen on a certain day, stresses out about it, then when the day comes aside from getting distracted during his morning routine and spending a few hours with his older son nothing seems to come of it. Then the twist happens and he realizes that the part of his daily routine he got distracted from was unloading his youngest son, still a baby, from the car, and he of course rushes out to find he's since cooked to death.

A lot of details in the greentext made me think the story is made up just because its structured so well, and at the end it goes into great detail describing what the dead kid looks like that seems like an attempt to be edgy that actually kind of brings the whole narrative down. But it was one of those stories where I would occasionally think about it and be like, "I wonder if that was actually real."

welp. it is now.
 
So he either forgot to take his kid to daycare and left them in the car for hours or someone put the kid in the car without informing him. There is way more to this story.
I doubt he killed himself for something that wasn't his fault. These stories inevitably involve the parent going on autopilot, forgetting to stop by daycare, and not thinking to look behind them before they get out of the car. I kind of wonder if the length of commute is a factor in these cases. It would be retarded to forget the kid during a 10-minute drive, but an hour-long one? I could see it.

I also wonder if large SUVs and/or tinted windows also increase the likelihood. If I have a large object in my backseat, I never not notice as I'm getting out of the car, but I drive a tiny sedan with untinted windows.
 
There's one of those 4chan greentexts where a guy discusses, in really plain detail, how he thought something bad was going to happen on a certain day, stresses out about it, then when the day comes aside from getting distracted during his morning routine and spending a few hours with his older son nothing seems to come of it. Then the twist happens and he realizes that the part of his daily routine he got distracted from was unloading his youngest son, still a baby, from the car, and he of course rushes out to find he's since cooked to death.

A lot of details in the greentext made me think the story is made up just because its structured so well, and at the end it goes into great detail describing what the dead kid looks like that seems like an attempt to be edgy that actually kind of brings the whole narrative down. But it was one of those stories where I would occasionally think about it and be like, "I wonder if that was actually real."

welp. it is now.
I'd be interested to read something like that if you have an example. Imagine if the Schizo predictions on 4chan turned out to become true.
 
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