Remember
the man who left his son inside his vehicle until the baby died from heat,
well, the father may have actually planned the whole event just to kill his son
and it may not have been an accident as first insinuated. Read what CNN is
saying below about the incident:
The
suspect in a Georgia toddler's death told police he used the Internet to
research child deaths inside vehicles, a search warrant said.
The
father, Justin Ross Harris, 33, has pleaded not guilty to charges of murder and
second-degree child cruelty in the death of his 22-month-old son, Cooper
Harris. The boy died after he was left seven hours in a sweltering SUV on June
18.
"During
an interview with Justin, he stated that he recently researched, through the
Internet, child deaths inside vehicles and what temperature it needs to be for
that to occur," according to a sworn statement in the warrant from a
police officer. "Justin stated that he was fearful that this could
happen."
According
to search warrants from a Cobb County magistrate court, investigators seized a
number of items from the father's home: An iPhone 5, Hyundai car, home laptop
computer, computer tower, a "Google chrome cast Internet searcher"
and other electronic devices.
Justin
Ross Harris has pleaded not guilty to charges of murder and second-degree child
cruelty in the death of his 22-month-old son.
Cobb
County Police said the purpose of the search warrants was to find blood, DNA,
writings and photographs relating to child abuse, child neglect, homicide to
children and cruelty to children.
Harris
sits in jail without bond, with an appearance before a judge set for next
Thursday. Police in Cobb County, part of metro Atlanta, have been tight-lipped
and haven't said whether what they found on the computer is one of the reasons
they arrested Harris.
Father
calls in to son's funeral
Though
Harris wasn't allowed out of the Cobb County Jail to attend his son's funeral
on Saturday in Tuscaloosa, Alabama, he called in and spoke to the entire
auditorium on speakerphone.
"Thank
you for everything you've done for my boy," he said. "Good life.
(Inaudible) No words to say. Just horrible. (Inaudible) I'm just sorry I can't
be there." "
He
told everyone he loved them and started crying again.
The
child's mother had wanted to obtain photos of her son from seized computers for
use at the funeral, but Cobb County police turned down her request, said Maddox
Kilgore, the attorney for Harris.
Police
spokesman Michael Bowman told CNN, "If we have evidence, we will not be
releasing that due to chain of custody issues."
Bowman
would not confirm what, if any, evidence they had in their possession.
'What
have I done?'
Initially,
police described the death of the toddler as the result of tragic
absent-mindedness.
They
said the dad had apparently forgotten the boy was in the back seat of his
Hyundai Tucson; he didn't remember until he was done with his workday, drove a
couple of miles and pulled into a shopping center parking lot.
But
suspicions grew as police investigated.
"The
chain of events that occurred in this case does not point toward simple
negligence, and evidence will be presented to support this allegation,"
said Cobb County Police Chief John House.
A
criminal warrant released Wednesday described the events that led to Cooper's
death.
A
timeline of events
On
the day Cooper died, Harris stopped for breakfast at a fast-food restaurant and
afterward strapped his son into a rear-facing child restraint seat on his SUV's
back seat, police said.
He
drove to his workplace, a Home Depot corporate office, about a half-mile away.
He works as a Web designer there.
Usually,
he would take his son to an on-site day care. But that day, police said, Harris
left him in the car seat.
During
his lunch break, he returned to his car, opening the driver's side door to put
something inside, police said.
After
work, around 4:16 p.m., the 33-year-old father got in his car and drove away. A
few miles away, he stopped the car at a shopping center and called for help.
When
it became clear Cooper was dead, Harris was so inconsolable police had to
restrain him.
"What
have I done?" he wailed as he tried to resuscitate the boy.
A
wave of sympathy
Each
year, dozens of children die from heatstroke in cars, according to KidsandCars.org.
More than 40 died last year. The organization says its tally is likely
incomplete and much lower than the real toll.
The
charging of Harris triggered a wave of sympathy and a vigorous debate over
whether the heartbroken father should be punished.
Two
change.org petitions urging authorities to release Harris were started and then
shut down this week. One petition posted this note: "I think that based on
the recent developments this petition is no longer relevant. I still pray that
this was truly an accident. If that is the case, the DA now knows that the
community does not want Justin prosecuted on murder charges."
Another,
set up at YouCaring.com, has raised more than $22,000 for the Harris family.
"Please
don't listen to the media. It just upsets me to watch it," wrote Heather
McCullar, who set it up. "Please don't listen to the media. The family
will speak when they can."
Contacted
by CNN via e-mail, she wrote back, "No one is allowed to comment right
now."
'The
manner of death is homicide'
As
Harris sits in jail, his wife, Leanna, would not discuss the case with the
media.
The
Cobb County medical examiner's office found the child's cause of death
"consistent with hyperthermia and the investigative information suggests
the manner of death is homicide," according to a Cobb County Department of
Public Safety statement issued Wednesday. Temperatures hit 92 degrees
Fahrenheit on the day of his death.
The
medical examiner's office is waiting for toxicology test results before making
an official ruling as to the cause and manner of the toddler's death.
Unbelievable!
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