Share and Follow
The boy was the “funniest little kid” who was playful and a big fan of snack time, according to one teacher.
COLUMBUS, Ohio — A 5-year-old child was pronounced dead at the hospital on Thursday afternoon after police said he was left in his mother’s vehicle in a Mansfield parking lot.
Police responded to a parking lot on Marion Avenue around 3:15 p.m. and found the child, unresponsive in his mother’s arms.
The child had been in the car since as early as 6:30 a.m., about nine hours prior. Temperatures in Mansfield reached a high of 91 degrees on Thursday.
Olivia Kidd said she has not stopped crying since finding out the young boy was one of her kindergartners and day care students.
“My heart is just broken,” Kidd said.
She said the little boy, who police have not yet identified, was the “funniest little kid” who was playful and a big fan of snack time.
“He told me he loved me every day,” she said. “I will miss seeing him at school next year, going to all of his events, seeing him at T-ball. I don’t know how I could forget him. I will remember him in everything, honestly.”
The child would have entered first grade in the fall.
Perrell Cameron and Jessica Phillips cared for the child in day care since he was a baby, before he moved on to kindergarten.
“I have been looking at pictures all night, all morning. Just to know it was him is so sad because he was so energetic, so loving. For being 5 years old, he was so sweet,” Cameron said.
“He was a wonderful child. He really was,” Phillips said.
Reminders for parents and caregivers during hot days
Police are reminding parents to check their backseats before they get out of a car.
The Mansfield child’s death is the ninth hot car-related death in the nation this year, according to the nonprofit organization Kids and Car Safety.
Fifty-five percent of hot car related deaths happen when a child is unknowingly left in a car, the nonprofit says.
To prevent this from happening, Kids and Car Safety recommends implementing these habits:
- Make sure your child is never left alone in a car.
- Place the child’s diaper bag or item in the front passenger seat as a visual cue that the child is with you.
- Make it a habit of opening the back door every time you park to ensure no one is left behind. To enforce this habit, place an item that you can’t start your day without in the back seat (employee badge, laptop, phone, handbag, etc.).
- Ask your childcare provider to call you right away if your child hasn’t arrived as scheduled.
- Clearly announce and confirm who is getting each child out of the vehicle. Miscommunication can lead to thinking someone else removed the child.
Lt. Nicholas Davis at the Columbus Division of Fire says parents should not leave a child in a car, even for a few minutes.
“I know people are busy in their day-to-day lives and think, ‘Let’s run into the store for a quick two minutes.’ But then two minutes turns into 15 minutes, and 15 minutes on a hot day like today is deadly, especially for a child,” he said.
Detectives are continuing to gather the facts of the case. Then, prosecutors will decide whether charges will be filed.