Disaster 9-year-old Texas girl dies in hot car while mother was at work: Police - This tragedy marks the third hot car death to occur in Texas in the last four days and at least the 13th child to die in a hot car nationwide this year, according to Kids and Car Safety.

https://abcnews.go.com/US/9-year-texas-girl-dies-hot-car-mother/story?id=123408734
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A 9-year-old girl has died in after she was intentionally left alone in a hot car while her mom was at work, according to Harris County, Texas, Sheriff Ed Gonzalez.

The girl's 36-year-old mother left the child unattended in a white Toyota Camry on Tuesday from approximately 6 a.m. to 2 p.m. while she worked at a manufacturing plant in Galena Park, Texas, near Houston, the sheriff's office said during a press conference.

The mother left the child with some water, partially rolled down the windows of the vehicle and then "proceeded to go to work for the day," officials said.

"There's never an excuse to leave a child unattended," Gonzalez said during the press conference.

Upon returning to the vehicle later in the afternoon when her shift ended, the mother found her daughter unresponsive. Law enforcement was contacted at approximately 2:06 p.m. and detained the mother, officials said. Temperatures in the Houston area reached around 93 degrees Fahrenheit on Tuesday, according to the National Weather Service.

The child was transported to a local hospital, where she was pronounced dead, officials said.
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Officials are investigating the death of a 9-year-old girl, who was intentionally left alone in a hot car while her mom was at work, July, 1 2025, in Houston.

Detectives continue to speak with the mother to gain more insight on why the child was kept in the car and the exact timeline of how long she was alone in the vehicle, the sheriff said. Officials are also waiting to receive the child's autopsy results before deciding whether to press any charges.

Gonzalez said the incident, "which could have been prevented," is a "unique" situation, since most hot car deaths are typically an accident.

"Maybe she has to make ends meet and keep food on the table and work. But the risk of death or harm -- there's just no reconciling that in my mind. You got to make other arrangements. It's not worth it to put a child at risk like this, for any particular reason," Gonzalez said.

He went on to say that nothing at this point shows that the mother "thought this would be the outcome."

This tragedy marks the third hot car death to occur in Texas in the last four days and at least the 13th child to die in a hot car nationwide this year, according to Kids and Car Safety, an organization focused on "saving the lives of children and pets in and around vehicles."
 
Fucking heartbreaking. Giving a child "Some water" and partially rolling down a window is not going to keep that child from dying of heat stroke.
Absolute sub-human of a mother. Charge her with 1st Degree Murder and send her to the firing line. This was 100% intentional, she fully intended for her daughter to die.
 
Just take the kid to your workplace, park her in an office there and keep her occuppied? If all else would fail me, that would be the option I would go with instead of "Lock the kid in the car with the windows partially rolled down and some water." I would like to know what is considered "partially" and "some" in the context of this story.

I agree with the other people in the thread btw. Some Casey Anthony shit might be going on here.
 
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Even a healthy 9 yr old would be reasonably afraid to get out if told to stay by their parent, and the danger would not be obvious. Heat death by 90s is slow and sneaky, you get tired and shut down. It's sad but you don't have to be retarded to die in a hot car, especially when you think you have nowhere else to go. I've seen people faint in amusement park lines, they'd be dead too if not rushed to a cool room and be hydrated/vitals checked.
 
I'm smelling some bullshit here. It didn't even start getting hot until noon that day. It was only 90+ for about an hour and a half before the mother got off; a healthy 9 year old in a car with the windows down would be dehydrated possibly but doubtful they would die that quickly. Especially since they'd be unrestrained and able to get out/move to some shade and had water.

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I'm smelling some bullshit here. It didn't even start getting hot until noon that day. It was only 90+ for about an hour and a half before the mother got off; a healthy 9 year old in a car with the windows down would be dehydrated possibly but doubtful they would die that quickly. Especially since they'd be unrestrained and able to get out/move to some shade and had water.

Even with the windows cracked, temps inside a car can rise fast and get way hotter than the outside temp. Even if the outside temp isn't as hot as 90.

There's definitely some bullshit going on though. I'm sticking with the "they're illegal aliens" theory but I don't know if we'll hear about it if that's the case. The Houston area is pretty blue. On the other hand they might want to capitalize on "This poor undocumented mother was so afraid of ICE that she left her daughter to die rather than face deportation" or some shit.
 
Just take the kid to your workplace, park her in an office there and keep her occuppied? If all else would fail me, that would be the option I would go with instead of "Lock the kid in the car with the windows partially rolled down and some water." I would like to know what is considered "partially" and "some" in the context of this story.

PL: My parents had to do this on very rare occasions when I was young; there was a spare office at one parent's place of work unofficially set aside just for that, with a TV/VCR and a few Disney movies. This only worked with kids who could be counted on to behave themselves for a few hours without too much supervision, and when coworkers were also willing to keep an eye out for trouble, but it was a godsend for the employees when a babysitter flaked at the last minute and there was no other option except missing a day of work.

I can't imagine the kind of freak out that would happen if something like that were done at any of the companies I've ever worked for; the manager who set it up would undoubtedly be fired, and probably the parent would be reported to CPS. There would endless memos and staff meetings about legal liability etc, followed by further discipline after thousands of hours of security footage were reviewed and unrelated infractions committed by other employees were documented.
 
I'm smelling some bullshit here. It didn't even start getting hot until noon that day. It was only 90+ for about an hour and a half before the mother got off; a healthy 9 year old in a car with the windows down would be dehydrated possibly but doubtful they would die that quickly. Especially since they'd be unrestrained and able to get out/move to some shade and had water.

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That’s air temperature. You need to consider that the car was under direct sunlight. Solar gain results in a build up of energy if air flow is not enough to regulate temperature.

Try standing in direct sunlight on a cool day and see how long you last.
 
I'm honestly baffled by how did this happen. Babies and toddlers are stuck in their seats but 9 year old is plenty old enough to open the door and step out. That's what I did if I choose to stay at car when parents went a store or something on a hot day.
That was my thought too. I'm wondering if the kid was a retard and the mother got sick of 9 years of cleaning up sped puke, and "accidentally" child locked the doors on a hot day.
 
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