Seems to me, and me alone, that if you can blank out having two babies in the car all day and still back there when you start for home ,already deceased and no doubt odiferous, any kind of alarm or reminder could be "blanked out" as well, if blanking out is what you do.
I don't know that it's "no doubt" that it stank like a dead body in that car. He could've rolled the windows down the moment he got in or even before he got in. It might not have smelled the way you assume it should.
I'm not sure.
There's more information in this article:
He is a member of the National Guard and deploys for several weeks at a time and their schedule changes a lot.
The twins had ear infections and no one had, as a result, been sleeping a lot. So by Friday, when this happened, everyone was on autopilot.
These hot car forgotten baby cases tend to happen at the end of the week more.
A change in routine is usually at play in these cases. In the case of Ray Ray Cavaliero, a traffic redirect also occurred as it did in this case.
That morning, the dad was to drive from their house in New City to "a nearby daycare" near their home to drop off their 4 year old. He did that. The next stop was the babies'daycare.
That was in Yonkers near where his wife worked. That was about 37 minutes on a normal morning.
After that he would go to his job in the Bronx, another 15 minutes or so.
However that morning in Yonkers, "there was construction. Juan Rodriguez would have to go one highway exit back from where he usually got off and backtrack."
It looks like instead of getting off at that unusual exit he just kept going to his work.
What happened the day Phoenix and Luna Rodriguez were left in their dad's hot car and died?
Here is what his usual route would have looked like, but without the added time for traffic:
Google Maps