Current:Home > Contact'This can't be real': He left his daughter alone in a hot car for hours. She died. -ProfitPoint
'This can't be real': He left his daughter alone in a hot car for hours. She died.
View
Date:2025-04-26 10:53:45
"Babe our family. How could I do this. I killed our baby, this can't be real."
So wrote the father who police say left his daughter in a car last week near Tucson, Arizona, to die.
The temperature that afternoon was 111 degrees.
She was 2 years old.
This is where you want to stop reading. Please don’t, especially if you are a parent or a grandparent.
Marana police say Christopher Scholtes, 37, intentionally left his daughter in the car that afternoon and had done so before.
Dozens of children die in hot cars each year
Apparently, she was sleeping and he didn’t want wake her so he left her there in the car, with the air conditioner running.
More than three hours later, his wife arrived home and well, you know.
The Scholtes tot was the ninth child to die in a hot car this year, according to Kids and Car Safety. Since then, you can add four more.
Every year, dozens of children die after being left in sweltering cars.
Often, it’s a mother running errands or a father who forgot to drop off a child at day care on his way to work. Rarely, but sometimes, it’s a parent who just doesn’t much care.
My child died in a hot car.What his legacy has taught me about love and forgiveness.
Dad knew A/C in car would shut off in half hour
It’ll be up to the courts to decide how this child came to be left to die, strapped in her car seat as the temperature rose to unbearable and ultimately unsurvivable levels.
Scholtes told police that he returned home with the child about 2:30 p.m. on July 9. Neighborhood surveillance cameras, however, put his arrival at 12:53 p.m.
It was after 4 p.m. when the child was found, when the mother got home from work and asked about her youngest.
Here’s the stunner: Scholtes told police he knew the car would shut off after 30 minutes, according to released court documents.
Scholtes’ other children, ages 9 and 5, told Marana police that their father got distracted, busy as he was playing a video game and putting food away.
It wasn't the first time he left a child in the car
Apparently, it wasn’t the first time he left a child unattended in the car.
“I told you to stop leaving them in the car,” the child’s mother texted him as the child was being rushed to a hospital, where the toddler was pronounced dead. “How many times have I told you?”
Scholtes has been arrested on suspicion of second-degree murder and child abuse. He could face decades in prison though I would imagine, if he's any sort of father, that he’s already living in hell.
"I told you to stop leaving them in the car, how many times have I told you," his wife texted.
"Babe I'm sorry,” he replied.
"We’ve lost her, she was perfect," she wrote.
Cities are only getting hotter:Our houses and asphalt made heat worse. Don't just complain about it. Stop it.
Lest you proclaim this could not happen to you ...
"Babe our family. How could I do this? I killed our baby. This can't be real."
I don’t envy the judge who must figure out where justice lies in a tragedy such as this.
Before you say it could never happen to you … well, perhaps the better thing to be thinking is this:
There but for the grace of God …
Laurie Roberts is a columnist for the Arizona Republic, where this column originally appeared. Reach Roberts at [email protected] or follow her on X (formerly Twitter): @LaurieRoberts.
veryGood! (575)
Related
- Louvre will undergo expansion and restoration project, Macron says
- What Detroit automakers have to give the UAW to get a deal, according to experts
- Italy investigates if acrobatic plane struck birds before it crashed, killing a child on the ground
- Ms. after 50: Gloria Steinem and a feminist publishing revolution
- Brianna LaPaglia Reveals The Meaning Behind Her "Chickenfry" Nickname
- In corrupt Libya, longtime warnings of the collapse of the Derna dams went unheeded
- A truck-bus collision in northern South Africa leaves 20 dead, most of them miners going to work
- Broncos score wild Hail Mary TD but still come up short on failed 2-point conversion
- Nevada attorney general revives 2020 fake electors case
- Authorities identify 2 California pilots who died in air racing event in Reno, Nevada
Ranking
- Cincinnati Bengals quarterback Joe Burrow owns a $3 million Batmobile Tumbler
- The Red Cross: Badly needed food, medicine shipped to Azerbaijan’s breakaway Nagorno-Karabakh region
- House Democrats press for cameras in federal courts, as Trump trials and Supreme Court session loom
- Ex-NFL player Sergio Brown missing after his mother killed near Chicago-area home
- Average rate on 30
- The bizarre secret behind China's spy balloon
- The Challenge Stars Nany González and Kaycee Clark Are Engaged
- Hundreds of flying taxis to be made in Ohio, home of the Wright brothers and astronaut legends
Recommendation
Will the 'Yellowstone' finale be the last episode? What we know about Season 6, spinoffs
Kirsten Dunst Proves Her Son Is a Spider-Man Fan—Despite Not Knowing She Played MJ
All 9 juveniles recaptured after escape from Pennsylvania detention center, police say
Real Housewives of Orange County's Shannon Beador Arrested for DUI, Hit and Run
Grammy nominee Teddy Swims on love, growth and embracing change
UAW strike, Trump's civil trial in limbo, climate protests: 5 Things podcast
Just two doctors serve this small Alabama town. What's next when they want to retire?
Hearings in $1 billion lawsuit filed by auto tycoon Carlos Ghosn against Nissan starts in Beirut