mickey2942
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I am just cynical enough to wonder if Parker had any identified disabilities or life insurance.
@mickey2942I am just cynical enough to wonder if Parker had any identified disabilities or life insurance.
@HeratWell, it should always be something that needs to be checked in an unanticipated death.
Just as drug and alcohol testing should have been done on CS when LE arrived. This is a big omission and I am really shocked in this oversight. It could be that LE may have been deferential to the mother's profession or socio-economic status.
Life Ins? Alcohol Testing?
@Herat
Re Life Ins. Absolutely, positively. LE should investigate whether any policies are in force on persons dying under suspicious circumstances. Adults, kids, toddlers.
Re drug or alcohol testing on Father. I recall a reference to items seized pursuant to a warrant and IIRC, a cup or glass w beverage was taken by LE.
If it was alcohol, hopefully LE did have blood drawn (or approp. tests done).
Agree with everything you sayThe problem with alcohol testing at arrest is that in this case the child died in the car on July 9 and the father was arrested on July 12. So any testing should have been conducted immediately.
It seems like msm would have reported if blood had been taken on the 9th but so far there’s been nothing. MSM did report that a glass filled with a liquid had been removed later that evening while LE searched the home.
Hopefully the search warrant covered a blood draw but it may take a while before we get an answer.
As far as I know there’s no law requiring blood testing a caregiver when a child is left to die in a hot car. But there sure as heck should be. If a police officer is allowed to stop a person driving erratically and give them a breathalyzer then they should check the same in hot car deaths.
JMO
This is so sad. I had my first son at 17 y/o as a Senior in HS and chose, BEFORE ANYONE (except me) knew I was pregnant, to leave my boyfriend because of his sketchy/dangerous family situation and NEVER told him or anyone except my parents, sister and (later) my husband who the father was. It was what I had to do to protect him. When my son was 5 y/o my ex-BF tried to come back into our lives and there were several months where we lived in fear. I was only 22 y/o and was horrified to realize I was capable of killing someone. Fortunately it never came to that, but I had played scenarios over and over in my head how I would protect my son if I had to. I would have killed - and died - for my son.Until we hear more, it appears the mother is going to prioritize the husband over her children. A persistent and worrisome pattern.
Actually, we don’t know if CS was screened for drugs or alcohol on 7/9. We know LE found a cup or glass of something and they collected it as evidence. We know that he got a 5 finger discount for several cans of beer at a grocery store & a mini mart at a gas station. We know he went into the men’s room at the gas station with 3 cans of beer and left carrying 1 can. Walked out without stopping at the cashier. I don’t recall the circumstances at the grocery, just that he took some cans of beer from an ice box and left without paying for them. More importantly, he had little Parker with him that morning and she wasn’t seen in either store - apparently he left her in the car while he was “shopping”.Well, if they didn't test for alcohol, that ship has sailed. Geez, what is it with the LEO in the Phoenix area?! In Gilbert, AZ, the police cleaned up after Charles Vallow was shot and killed. Here, a baby dies in the hot car, and they don't secure the scene and test the primary caregiver, CS, for drugs or alcohol.
Get it together, LEO!!!
The problem with alcohol testing at arrest is that in this case the child died in the car on July 9 and the father was arrested on July 12. So any testing should have been conducted immediately.
It seems like msm would have reported if blood had been taken on the 9th but so far there’s been nothing. MSM did report that a glass filled with a liquid had been removed later that evening while LE searched the home.
Hopefully the search warrant covered a blood draw but it may take a while before we get an answer.
As far as I know there’s no law requiring blood testing a caregiver when a child is left to die in a hot car. But there sure as heck should be. If a police officer is allowed to stop a person driving erratically and give them a breathalyzer then they should check the same in hot car deaths.
JMO
I wonder if DUI rules apply. DUI does not mean “blood level over 0.08”, it could be “BAL 0.05 but impaired to drive.” Field sobriety test, for example. So if the police confirms that CS looked drunk on July 9th, it can’t be neglected. On the other hand, what applies to driving may not apply to babysitting. We have determined levels for DYI, but there is no specific BAL above which you are not allowed to babysit.
I have thought about that. But he did have the keys, of what he states he thought was a running vehicle. That can be inferred as "intent" to drive, same as when people who have passed out in their car. They are not driving, but arrested for DUI, nonetheless.
Miami cop charged with DUI after being found passed out in car with gun on lap: Police
A Miami police officer was arrested on a DUI Monday night after he was found passed out inside a car with a gun on his lap.www.nbcmiami.com
I spent all day yesterday looking in the AZ courts for anything about this case and another. He has a hearing coming up, IIRC on 11/20 @ 9am. Fingers crossed it is on as scheduled.Any updates??
Anesthesiologists are more and more likely to be contract workers.I spent all day yesterday looking in the AZ courts for anything about this case and another. He has a hearing coming up, IIRC on 11/20 @ 9am. Fingers crossed it is on as scheduled.
I wasted a couple hours earlier in the week looking for ES in Banner Hospital & UA and found nothing. I don’t know if I had bad luck or if both have been scrubbed. I only found 1 other anesthesiologist so I suspect I missed something.