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proud2BlibKansan Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Sun Jul-29-07 10:51 AM
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Sentences vary when kids die in hot cars
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By ALLEN G. BREED
AP National Writer
Chris O'Meara


This photo, released by the Aiken County, S.C., Sheriff's office, shows Karla Edwards when she was booked in April 2006 in Aiken, S. C., on a homicide charge in the death of her 15-month-old son, Zachary Frison. Edwards pleaded guilty June 26, 2007, to leaving Zachary in the car for nine hours while she went to work. A judge sentenced her to 20 years in prison.


This undated photo of Leon T. Jewell was released by the Kentucky Dept. of Corrections. Jewell, of Lexington, Ky., said he was drunk when he left his 9-month-old son, Daniel, in a car in August 2005. He pleaded guilty to second-degree manslaughter, but a merciful judge sentenced him to seven years' probation and ordered him into rehab. After becoming drunk on what would have been Daniel's second birthday, the distraught Jewell was kicked out of rehab. He is now serving out his sentence in a Kentucky prison.

Kevin Kelly is a law-abiding citizen who, much distracted, left his beloved 21-month-old daughter in a sweltering van for seven hours. Frances Kelly had probably been dead for more than four hours by the time a neighbor noticed her strapped in her car seat; when rescue personnel removed the girl from the vehicle, her skin was red and blistered, her fine, carrot-colored hair matted with sweat. Two hours later, her body temperature was still nearly 106 degrees.

What is the appropriate punishment for a doting parent responsible for his child's death? A judge eventually spared Kelly a lengthy term in prison. Still, it is a question that is asked dozens of times each year.

Since the mid-1990s, the number of children who died of heat exhaustion while trapped inside vehicles has risen dramatically, totaling around 340 in the past 10 years. Ironically, one reason was a change parent-drivers made to protect their kids after juvenile air-bag deaths peaked in 1995 - they put them in the back seat, where they are more easily forgotten.

An Associated Press analysis of more than 310 fatal incidents in the past 10 years found that prosecutions and penalties vary widely, depending in many cases on where the death occurred and who left the child to die - parent or caregiver, mother or father:

more. . .
http://www.kansascity.com/449/story/209161.html
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