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Baby dies in hot car, Sydney: Police consider charging dad

by Abella
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The police are considering accusing the father of a baby girl who died after being left in a hot car.

Olivia was not responded to a vehicle outside of Jelly creatures Early Learning Center in Earlwood, in the southwest of Sydney, just after 5.30 pm on Tuesday.

It is understood that Olivia's father, Etienne Ancelet, had arrived in the daycare center to pick up his daughter, but was told that she had never been dropped off.

He then found Olivia in his car where she had left for hours for hours, while the temperatures outside 30 ° C exceeded.

2GBGastheer Ben Fordham reports that the police are now considering accusing Ancelet.

“A Senior Police Source has told us:” We have to work through the negligence factor before she files charges “.

“Nobody suggests that this father would harm his baby. He seems to be a loving father obsessed with the care of his little girl.

“But on Thursday something terribly wrong and the police must judge all the factors that have contributed to fatality and they look for legal advice on that front.”

In his house on Thursday morning, Mr Ancelet told Daily Mail Australia that the couple struggled with the tragic loss of their daughter.

And he said he was stunned by the previous statements that would have been made public without his knowledge.

“At the moment the statement I would like to make that we have not made any statements to the media and we still process this,” Mr Ancelet told Daily Mail Australia.

“I would appreciate a clarification that the family did not make any statements.”

Baby dies in hot car, Sydney: Police consider charging dad

Etienne Ancelet (depicted) cut a deserted figure with his head bent while he walked home from the local stores

Family members joined Etienne Ancelet (photo) to walk to the stores for some groceries

Family members joined Etienne Ancelet (photo) to walk to the stores for some groceries

Etienne Ancelet and his partner Kim Visconti are depicted with Baby Olivia on her first birthday

Etienne Ancelet and his partner Kim Visconti are depicted with Baby Olivia on her first birthday

It is understood to mean that other members of the family have issued a media department on behalf of Mr Ancelet without his knowledge or explicit registration.

The heartbreaking screams of Mr. Ancelet sounded when he discovered his daughter in the back of the car, causing the nearby residents to ran to him.

They desperately tried to breathe new life into Olivia before paramedics arrived five minutes later.

“I killed my daughter! … F *** I can't process this, “he shouted before he was taken to the hospital with a shock.

Olivia was declared dead on the spot. The exact circumstances of what happened are still being investigated.

Roy Gomes, who lives next to the daycare, mowed his lawn when he heard Mr Ancelet's cries.

“I heard screaming and ran away and saw the father with the baby,” said Mr. Gomes, whose house is next to the childcare center.

“I took her off him and tried resuscitation for about five minutes until the ambulance arrived.

'All neighbors were really good at placing water on her and tried to cool her because she was clearly still very hot.

“But she was just Floppy and there was no life.”

The desperate father screamed with horror after he realized that his baby daughter was still in the car

The desperate father screamed with horror after he realized that his baby daughter was still in the car

Baby Olivia (depicted asleep with her stinging father) was found in the car outside Jelly Beings Early Learning Center in the outskirts of Sydney van Earlwood just after 5.30 pm on Tuesday

Baby Olivia (depicted asleep with her stinging father) was found in the car outside Jelly Beings Early Learning Center in the outskirts of Sydney van Earlwood just after 5.30 pm on Tuesday

The police have set up a crime scene and started a major investigation. Detectives were seen in the childcare center when parents arrived to drop off their children on Wednesday

The police have set up a crime scene and started a major investigation. Detectives were seen in the childcare center when parents arrived to drop off their children on Wednesday

The police have set up a crime scene and started a major investigation. Detectives were arrived in the childcare center on Wednesday when parents arrived to drop off their children.

Different left bouquets of flowers at the gate and on the nature strip.

“Leaving a child in a vehicle can be dangerous at any time,” said chief inspector Christine McDonald on Tuesday evening.

'Leaving a child for a longer period can be deadly. This is an absolute tragedy.

“It is also something that influences the wider community … This has a rippling effect in our community because so many of us can place ourselves in a similar situation.”

No charges have been made about the tragedy.

“As soon as he is, we speak with (the father) to get more details,” said Spt McDonald.

Olivia's mother also helps the police. On Thursday, a police spokesperson said they would not spend any further updates about the tragedy.

Messages Online show Mr Ancelet as a loving father who easily embraced as a first parent.

In March he shared a photo of him and Olivia Duten together with his little girl in his arms.

In addition to the image he wrote: “My most memorable birthday to date.”

Jelly beings Early Learning Center in Earlwood, in the southwest of Sydney, is depicted

Jelly beings Early Learning Center in Earlwood, in the southwest of Sydney, is depicted

Several mothers were seen that bouquets of flowers left behind the daycare center

Several mothers were seen that bouquets of flowers left behind the daycare center

Rescuers who attended the 'deep traumatic' incident are offered support.

“I am a mother, you can imagine how traumatic, you just – you can't even imagine,” said McDonald.

Kidsafe WA -Chief Executive Scott Phillips has previously said that children are only left in hot cars, have occurred more often, with around 5,000 children saved from closed cars in Australia every year.

The Earlwood incident may be a case of forgotten babysyndrome, a global phenomenon that leads to the death of dozens of children every year.

According to researchers from the University of South Florida, more than 25 percent of parents with children under the age of three forgot that their child was in the car.

If the parent has a change in his routine, they can forget their message when their brains go into 'steering machine' while traveling a well -known route. Stress and lack of sleep can also contribute.

“There are brain imaging studies to show that when you do something out of habit, you can even suppress conscious cognitive memorial system and so you lose the consciousness of your plan,” explains David David Diamond of the University of South Florida .

Many new electric vehicles are equipped with detection systems that can sound an alarm if passengers are locked in the car.

Some cars, such as the BYD dolphin model, even encourage air conditioning to ensure that the passenger or pet left behind remains at a safe temperature.

Another new model, Volvo's EX90, only lets the car be locked if the interior radar system shows that it is empty.

But some Aussies claim that the technology has been too slow to roll out and should have been present to prevent the death of Baby Olivia.

The newest tragedy comes after the second birthday of the death of Peuter Arikh Hasan, who was left in a car for six hours on a 35C day in Glenfield in Sydney in the southwest in February 2023.

Newaz Hasan bundled his two sons in his car for the morning school run, dropped his oldest in primary school and believed that he had dropped his youngest to childcare before he returned to their house in Glenfield to work.

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