Sixth hot car-related child death this year highlights ongoing risk

Sixth hot car-related child death this year highlights ongoing risk
Sixth hot car-related child death this year highlights ongoing risk
Marin Tomas/Getty Images

(NEW YORK) — A 2-year-old boy was found dead Tuesday evening inside a hot car in Cobb County, Georgia, officials said Wednesday, marking the sixth hot car-related death in 2024.

According to the Cobb County Police Department, the child was found unresponsive in a parked vehicle at approximately 5:36 pm.

He was transported to Kennestone Hospital where he was pronounced dead, police said.

“This is one example of some things that can go wrong, but there are others,” Chief Stuart VanHoozer said during a news conference Wednesday. 

VanHoozer urged the public to “really really really be careful in this heat.”

According to a police news release, no charges have been filed at this time and there is no evidence that suggests the child was left inside the vehicle.

Police said they do not know how the child got into the car, or how long he remained inside.

On Monday, the San Antonio Police Department and Metro Health used dummies to demonstrate how truly hot the inside of a car can get, according to ABC affiliate KSAT. After just 15 minutes of the car being turned off, KSAT reported that temperatures inside the vehicle had already reached 110 degrees.

This police demonstration occurred in response to a Friday afternoon incident, in which three children were rescued by a Good Samaritan from a hot car in San Antonio, Texas.

The one-month-old, 2-year-old, and 4-year-old were trapped inside the car for about 50 minutes, police said.

“A few minutes in a hot car is a recipe for disaster,” Amber Rollins, Director of Kids and Car Safety, told ABC News. “Minutes can literally be the difference between life, death or severe brain damage for a child alone in a hot car.”

The National Weather Service confirmed that temperatures in San Antonio reached 99 degrees that day.

Police confirmed that the mother was present on the scene and “stated she went inside a store and did not realize how long she was gone.” She has been arrested on three counts of abandonment and endangering a child, according to law enforcement.

After the bystander called the police, the children were successfully extracted from the vehicle and transported to a local hospital with expectations for a full recovery.

More than 900 children have died in hot cars since 1998, the federal government reports.

There are 25 states with Good Samaritan laws that “protect citizens from liability if they break into a vehicle to rescue a person or pet,” according to Kids and Car Safety. Because the risk of death increases with every passing minute in a hot car, citizens can be encouraged to take action as soon as possible without fear of retribution.

Rollins acknowledged that these incidents are not always a result of neglect.

“Child hot car deaths and injuries are largely misunderstood by the general public and the majority of parents believe this would never happen to them,” Rollins said in a statement Wednesday.

Rollins spoke to ABC News about a dangerous situation that almost occurred with her son, despite her doing this work for 12 years and being a person frequently interviewed on how to avoid such incidents.

She explained how sleep deprivation combined with a change in routine created confusion and caused her to make a wrong turn.

“My son made a screeching sound in the backseat and then I realized he was with me, but I completely lost awareness of him,” she said. “These little changes that seem completely harmless and non-eventful can be a trigger if the right circumstances align.”

There have been six deaths from hot cars in 2024 so far, all reportedly children.

“Eighty-eight percent of [all hot car] victims are children aged three and under,” Rollins said. Children are especially at risk due to the fact that their “body temperature rises three to five times faster than an adult.”

This news comes amid the July Fourth holiday, when child fatalities tend to spike, with an increased risk for vehicle backovers and turnovers.

According to Kids and Car Safety data, “July 4th was the deadliest holiday weekend in 2023 for children in terms of non-traffic fatalities.”

Rollins emphasized the need for parents to take every precaution necessary to protect their children. Not only does the holiday weekend present a threat, but the persistent high temperatures continue to leave children at risk, she said.

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Pair of 19-year-old men arrested for illegally hunting on Oprah Winfrey’s Hawaii ranch

Pair of 19-year-old men arrested for illegally hunting on Oprah Winfrey’s Hawaii ranch
Pair of 19-year-old men arrested for illegally hunting on Oprah Winfrey’s Hawaii ranch
Department of Land and Natural Resources

(NEW YORK) — Two 19-year-old men have been arrested after being accused of illegally hunting on Oprah Winfrey’s ranch in Hawaii, officials say.

The incident occurred just before midnight on June 21 in the Kula area of Upcounty Maui, according to the Department of Land and Natural resources in Hawaii, when two men were stopped by officers from the DLNR Division of Conservation and Resources Enforcement (DOCARE) after they were observed allegedly using a spotlight for hunting purposes.

“This happened near the intersection of Thompson Road and Kamaʻole Road, in the Kula area of Upcountry Maui. Thompson Road is a public road that runs through private property owned by the Oprah Winfrey Ranch,” officials said. “Luke Allen and Ty Munoz, both 19, of Upcountry Maui were arrested after being stopped.”

Allen and Munoz were subsequently taken to the Maui Police station in Wailuku for booking but further charges are expected following a police investigation.

“DOCARE officers found a loaded shotgun and a loaded rifle in the pair’s truck,” authorities said. “Further investigation revealed Allen and Munoz were hunting without valid licenses, had ammunition in the vehicle and were allegedly hunting on private land, at night, without permission. Officers say the rifle Allen had in his possession was unregistered.”

The two men were arrested and charged with several crimes, including hunting on private land at night without permission, for using unregistered guns and for not having a hunting license.

A trial date has not yet been set and the investigation into the case is currently ongoing.

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Video shows dog starting house fire by turning on stove in middle of night

Video shows dog starting house fire by turning on stove in middle of night
Video shows dog starting house fire by turning on stove in middle of night
Facebook / Colorado Springs Fire Department

(COLORADO SPRINGS, Colo.) — Authorities have released a video of a dog starting a housefire when it turned on the stove in the middle of the night and ignited some boxes sitting on top of it, fire officials said.

The incident occurred early in the morning on June 26 in Colorado Springs, Colorado, when the Colorado Springs Fire Department was dispatched to a home on the 1600 block of Rushmore Drive at approximately 4:43 a.m. after receiving a call from a family saying they had experienced a fire on their stove but had been able to extinguish it relatively quickly, according to a statement released by fire officials.

“Engine 23 arrived on scene at 4:47 a.m. at a residential home with no visible fire or smoke. Upon investigation, crews did not find any active fire but did find evidence of a fire,” said the Colorado Springs Fire Department in a statement on social media.

The male homeowner was able to extinguish the fire before crews got there, authorities said, but he was later transported to a local hospital and treated for smoke inhalation. There were no other injuries reported in the home, either to people or their pets.

“After talking to the homeowners and looking through their home security footage, we determined their pup got a bit curious and accidentally switched on the oven which had some boxes on top of it,” said the Colorado Springs Fire Department.

The footage shows a dog jumping up and placing its paws on the stove to inspect the boxes placed on top and authorities believe that when it jumped down, it accidentally turned the stove on which ignited the boxes and started the house fire.

The homeowners were immediately alerted and woken up by their Apple HomePod sending them a “high heat” notification and were able to get to the fire before it had time to spread through the home.

Officials took this unique situation to remind people about fire safety inside their homes.

“This is a good reminder to always have working smoke alarms inside and outside every sleeping area and on every floor of the home, ensure all combustibles are away from your stovetop/oven, and know two ways out of every room in your home in the event of a fire,” said the Colorado Springs Fire Department.

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Man arrested in connection with attempted rape of Central Park sunbather: Police

Man arrested in connection with attempted rape of Central Park sunbather: Police
Man arrested in connection with attempted rape of Central Park sunbather: Police
James C Hooper/Getty Images

(NEW YORK) — A man has been arrested in connection with the attempted rape of a woman sunbathing in Central Park last month, police said.

Jermaine Longmire has been charged with attempted rape and sex abuse by the Manhattan District Attorney’s Office, police said Wednesday.

NYPD Chief of Detectives Joe Kenny said Longmire’s DNA appeared on the woman’s bikini bottom, which had been recovered by police.

The suspect has priors in New York and a “substantial arrest history” in several other states, Kenny said.

Sources told ABC News on Tuesday that the suspect had been in custody on a separate forcible touching case and DNA linked him to the Central Park incident.

The 21-year-old woman was alone and sunbathing in the Great Hill section of the park when a man came toward her exposing himself around 1:30 p.m. on June 24, New York Police Department Chief of Patrol John Chell said last week.

“She screams and gets up to run,” but “he tackles her from behind” and “tried to get on top of her,” Chell said.

The victim fought the man off and he fled, he added.

The New York Police Department released a sketch of the suspect on June 27.

The attacker had been described as a Black man in his 30s with curly hair, police said. He has a medium build and is about 6 feet tall, police said.

Police said there were no known patterns for sexual assaults in Central Park, which Deputy Commissioner Tarik Sheppard described as “one of the most iconic locations in the world” for New Yorkers and visitors.

ABC News’ Emily Shapiro contributed to this report.

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74-year-old woman dies after being pushed into moving train in San Francisco

74-year-old woman dies after being pushed into moving train in San Francisco
74-year-old woman dies after being pushed into moving train in San Francisco
Michael Macor/The San Francisco Chronicle via Getty Images

(SAN FRANCISCO) — The 74-year-old woman who was pushed into an approaching train at a Bay Area Rapid Transit station has died and a man has been arrested in connection with her death, according to BART police.

The woman hit her head on the train and fell onto the Powell Street Station platform at around 11 p.m. Monday night, according to BART police.

BART police arrested 49-year-old Trevor Belmont, a man experiencing homelessness, who also goes by Hoak Taing, authorities said.

The victim was transported to San Francisco General Hospital and later died.

BART police said this is the first murder on the train system this year.

Belmont was arrested shortly after the incident and will be booked into the San Francisco County Jail.

Belmont is being held on murder and elder abuse, according to jail records. A court date has not yet been set.

BART police have yet to identify a motive in the incident and the investigation remains ongoing.

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Tourist fatally struck by suspects’ vehicle during robbery at outdoor mall in California: Police

Tourist fatally struck by suspects’ vehicle during robbery at outdoor mall in California: Police
Tourist fatally struck by suspects’ vehicle during robbery at outdoor mall in California: Police
KABC

(NEWPORT BEACH, Calif.) — A New Zealand tourist was killed during a robbery at a California mall after the suspects struck her with their vehicle as they fled the scene, police said.

The incident unfolded Tuesday afternoon at Fashion Island, an outdoor shopping mall in Newport Beach, police said.

The woman and her husband were walking in the area when two suspects, one armed with a handgun, approached and robbed them, according to the Newport Beach Police Department.

“There was a struggle, and at this point we believe the suspects dragged her into the street,” Newport Beach Police spokesperson Sgt. Steve Oberon said during a presser Tuesday.

The two suspects then attempted to get into a white Toyota Camry sedan driven by a third suspect to flee the scene, police said.

“One of the suspects ran, while the vehicle fled and actually struck the female victim,” Oberon said.

The woman — identified by police Wednesday as 68-year-old Patricia McKay — was pronounced dead at the scene. Her husband is believed to have been uninjured, Oberon said.

The suspect who fled on foot fired three rounds before also getting in the vehicle, police said. No one was struck by the gunfire, police said.

Officers responded to reports of a robbery and a pursuit of the suspect vehicle ensued. One of the suspects was arrested after fleeing on foot after the vehicle stopped in Cypress, police said.

The two other suspects were also arrested in Los Angeles County after abandoning the vehicle and fleeing on foot, police said.

The suspects were transported to the Newport Beach Police Department’s jail and booked for homicide, robbery with a firearm and conspiracy, police said.

They were identified by police Wednesday as Leroyernest Joseph McCrary, 26, of Compton; Jaden Cunningham, 18, of Lancaster; and Malachi Eddward Darnell, 18, of Los Angeles. It is unclear if they have an attorney who can speak on their behalf.

There are no outstanding suspects, police said. The incident remains under investigation.

Newport Beach Mayor Will O’Neill decried the “stunning, staggering act.”

“Newport Beach is a safe community and we’re mourning the loss of someone today, a loss that never should have happened,” he said during Tuesday’s press briefing. “Frankly, to hell with these guys. They came into our city, knowing that they were going to commit a crime, and a woman is dead today because of it. It’s heartbreaking, it’s a tragedy.”

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Former Indianapolis Colts player Daniel Muir arrested after missing son found safe

Former Indianapolis Colts player Daniel Muir arrested after missing son found safe
Former Indianapolis Colts player Daniel Muir arrested after missing son found safe
George Bridges/MCT/Tribune News Service via Getty Images

(KOKOMO, Ind.) — A former Indianapolis Colts player has been arrested after his teenage son, who had been missing for two weeks, was found at the family’s home in Kokomo, Indiana.

Bryson Muir, 14, was found “safe and well” and is now in the care of the Cass County Department of Child Services, according to Indiana State Police.

Daniel Muir, 40, was taken into custody Wednesday morning and faces charges of domestic battery and obstruction of justice, police said.

Muir, a defensive tackle, played in the NFL for seven seasons, four with the Colts, from 2007 to 2013. He played in college at Kent State, but went undrafted in 2007 before signing as a free agent with the Green Bay Packers. He had just 99 tackles and 1.5 sacks in his career.

Muir’s wife and the boy’s mother, 38-year-old Kristin Muir, was also arrested and charged with obstruction of justice, according to police.

Bryson was last seen June 16 leaving a relative’s home in Ohio with his mother, Indiana State Police said last week.

The two left in a car belonging to Servant Leader’s Foundation, a religious organization that also owns the property where the Muir family resided, police said. Shortly after leaving the relative’s home, police pulled the car over, but Bryson was not inside.

Two days later, the Cass County Department of Child Services asked police to investigate allegations of domestic battery toward Bryson.

Police said they attempted to contact his parents, but were initially unsuccessful. They later agreed to bring Bryson to meet with police, but then “backed out of that arrangement, which signaled an unwillingness to cooperate.”

On Wednesday, police said they had found Bryson. A photo released by police showed the 14-year-old with a black eye.

An investigation remains ongoing, and police asked anyone with information about the incident to call 800-382-0689.

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Lawsuit alleges that Northwestern law school’s hiring practices are biased against white men

Lawsuit alleges that Northwestern law school’s hiring practices are biased against white men
Lawsuit alleges that Northwestern law school’s hiring practices are biased against white men
seng kui Lim/500px/Getty Images

(CHICAGO) — A lawsuit filed against Northwestern University’s law school claims that its hiring practices give preference to less-qualified women and applicants of color, taking away opportunities from better qualified white men.

The lawsuit, which was filed in Federal District Court in Chicago, alleges that faculty hiring practices at universities in the United States are a “cesspool of corruption and lawlessness.”

The suit alleges that Northwestern Pritzker School of Law has instituted a mandate to hire more women and people of color, which the suit claims is a violation of federal law that prohibits discriminating against applicants on the basis of race and sex.

The lawsuit, filed on Tuesday, comes a year after the U.S. Supreme Court struck down affirmative action programs in college admissions.

“Northwestern Pritzker School of Law is among the top law schools in the country, and we are proud of their outstanding faculty,” Northwestern University spokesperson Jon Yates said in a statement to ABC News. “We intend to vigorously defend this case.”

Jonathan Mitchell, the lead attorney behind the suit, did not immediately respond to a request for comment. Mitchell is known for his work as the lawyer behind S.B. 8, the Texas abortion law passed in 2021. He has also represented former President Donald Trump at the Supreme Court for his right to appear on the Colorado presidential primary ballot this year.

The plaintiff, Faculty, Alumni, and Students Opposed to Racial Preferences (FASORP) describes themselves as a voluntary, nonprofit membership organization “formed for the purpose of restoring meritocracy in academia and fighting race and sex preferences that subordinate academic merit to so-called diversity considerations.”

The lawsuit alleges that the law school hires women and people of color “with mediocre and undistinguished records over white men who have better credentials, better scholarship and better teaching ability.”

It says that three of 21 job offers from the law school over the past three years have gone to white men.

FASORP previously tried to sue both New York University and Harvard Law Reviews in 2018 for similar claims of discrimination against white men. In both cases they were unsuccessful, with a judge ruling that the organization and its members lacked standing to sue.

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10-year-old boy dies in Arizona after hiking in triple-digit temperatures

10-year-old boy dies in Arizona after hiking in triple-digit temperatures
10-year-old boy dies in Arizona after hiking in triple-digit temperatures
Helene Gondelle/500px/Getty Images

(PHOENIX) — A 10-year-old boy has died after he suffered a “heat-related medical emergency” during a hike in Arizona on Tuesday.

Firefighters from the Phoenix, Tempe and Chandler fire departments were called to South Mountain Park and Preserve around 2 p.m. local time, according to a release from Phoenix Fire. Phoenix Police Department said officers were called shortly later to Mormon Trailhead.

The boy had reportedly been hiking with relatives when he began to suffer the medical emergency.

Firefighters, technical rescue team members and police officers reached the boy, who was up about one mile on the trail, according to Phoenix Fire and Phoenix PD. The boy was airlifted from the trail to a waiting ambulance, where he was transported to the hospital in “extremely critical condition” before dying.

Phoenix Fire officials told local ABC News affiliate KNXV-TV that the boy’s family may have been from out of town, but where is unclear.

Phoenix PD detectives are currently investigating the incident. The department did not immediately return ABC News’ request for comment.

Temperatures in Phoenix reached a high of 113 degrees Fahrenheit on Tuesday, according to National Weather Service Phoenix in a post on X, about six degrees above the average temperature.

Heat is the leading cause of weather-related deaths in the United States, even though most are preventable, according to the Environmental Protection Agency. About 1,220 people die in the U.S. from heat-related illnesses every year, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention said.

Normally during extreme heat — meaning temperatures that are hotter and/or more humid than average — the body tries to cool itself by sweating.

If a person does not replenish with fluids, it can lead to dehydration. The body temperature can then continue to rise and mild symptoms emerge such as sunburn, heat rash or heat cramps.

This can progress to heat exhaustion — which includes symptoms of headaches, dizziness, muscle cramps, nausea and vomiting — and, if the body reaches extremely high temperatures, heat stroke.

Anyone can be impacted by heat-related illness but some populations — including the elderly, infants and young children, outdoor workers and people with low socioeconomic status — are at higher risk.

To lower the risk of heat-related illness, the CDC recommends staying hydrated and remaining in an air-conditioned space as much as possible. If you go outside, the CDC recommends waring lightweight, loose-fitting clothing.

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Over 90 million Americans on alert for extreme heat

Over 90 million Americans on alert for extreme heat
Over 90 million Americans on alert for extreme heat
ABC News

(NEW YORK) — Heat alerts have been issued for 21 states from Washington to Florida on Wednesday, with more than 90 million on alert for extreme weather.

Several wildfires also exploded in the West on Tuesday due to dry conditions and ongoing heat.

The dangerous heat is just beginning in the West, but it has already claimed the life of a 10-year-old boy who was hiking in Phoenix on Tuesday.

This prolonged heat could be for the record books, and could be one of the worst in 18 years for parts of California.

A heat advisory has been issued for coastal cities, such as Los Angeles and San Francisco, where temperatures could get close to 90 degrees on Wednesday. Inland temperatures could rise into the 110s.

Dozens of record highs are expected over the next week in the West, even all the way to Seattle and Portland, Oregon.

In the South and Mississippi River Valley, the combination of heat and humidity could push the heat index over 110 degrees.

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