Police: Mom says it's 'too hot' in squad car after arrest for allegedly leaving child in hot car

Authored by wsbtv.com and submitted by itsamelaura
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by: WFTV.com Updated: Jul 8, 2017 - 3:54 PM

SOUTH DAYTONA, Fla. - A Florida woman is facing charges after police said she left her child in a hot car and then told police “it was hot” when she was put into the back of a police cruiser, according to a report.

Police were called to a Dollar General store in South Daytona last week for a report of a child left in a vehicle.

They said they found a 5-year-old sitting in a locked Hyundai alone, with the front driver’s side window down and both passenger side windows rolled up. The rear driver’s side window was slightly open, a report said. The car was parked in direct sunlight without any shade, police said.

Police said the boy appeared upset and was sweating profusely.

Police dashcam video captured the interaction between mother Colleen Walker, 30, officers and firefighters.

“He wasn’t in the car for two hours, it was like, 12 minutes,” Walker told police as she walked out of the store, adding her son had wanted to stay in the car while she shopped.

“Don’t get all huffy and puffy because I’m not going to feel bad for you. I don’t care,” the firefighter said.

The witness who called 911 said the child was left for about 20 minutes and that the child was crying and screaming.

The manager of the store told police Walker has been walking around the store for nearly 30 minutes.

Surveillance video showed Walker in the store for about 30 minutes with her 3-year-old daughter.

A firefighter told Walker her son was lucky to be alive.

“We get cases and cases where, 10, 15 minutes the kid is dead,” the firefighter said.

The South Daytona Fire Department checked the temperature of the vehicle, which was 107 degrees.

The child’s vitals were checked and he was OK.

Police said while she was being driven to jail, Walker told officers to put on the air conditioning because it was “too hot.”

“She was complaining that the backseat of our patrol car was too hot on her way to the jail, and asked the officer to turn the AC up,” Lt. Dan Dietrich said.

She’s facing child neglect charges and was jailed on a $5,000 bail. Walker could face up to five years in prison if convicted.

doryby on July 9th, 2017 at 04:37 UTC »

Children dying in hot cars are a sad story. Some parents leave their kids in there out of negligence, some otherwise caring parents simply forget their child in the backseat of their car and they die a painful death. There is an interesting article about it in the Washinton Post.

One of the parents who forgot their child in the car was a NASA engineer, afterwards his colleagues worked on an alarm system for such cases, but no one wants to manufacture it because they don't want to be held liable in case a child dies despite this system being in place.

cin979 on July 9th, 2017 at 03:54 UTC »

If revenge is a dish best served cold then I guess irony is a dish best served hot

saint1959j on July 8th, 2017 at 22:32 UTC »

There are 50 states in which this could take place, for once let it not be------of course, it's Florida.