YidArmyRach
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Daddy pushed their head too hard into the stainless steel refrigerator could be an accidental death, too.
Just jumping off your post .........
Consuming something they shouldn't have had access to could be an accidental death, drowning in the bath when a parent wasn't supervising properly could be an accidental death, as could a child sticking something into the electric socket whilst a parent was asleep. All just examples, which don't involve direct involvement/violence from another person.
An accident can have more consequences if it occurs when a parent wasn't supervising the child - especially if there are other children in the family, whose care may become a concern for the courts.
I can remember reading stories of children who drowned in the bath when mum or dad "just went to get a towel" or "just went to answer the phone", or have died in an accident when the parent had "turned their back or a minute". How does anyone know how long the baby/child in each case was really left alone? We don't. Perhaps the only difference is the reaction - those parents called for help, whereas others in a similar position might panic and hide the child (and I mean to simply hide the body, not to make it look like a murder). As someone said, there are children who have never been found who have gone missing from their homes. Who knows if there are cases that have been caused by a parent panicking after an accident, especially if they feel their other children might be taken from them.
The Mikaeel Kumar case in Scotland involved a 3 year old being reported as missing, having let himself out of the home whilst his mum and siblings slept. His body was found some days later, discarded in a suitcase after his mother had hidden it after he had died, following her beating him (and her failing to get medical attention for him).
He was beaten for being sick, and beaten again whilst unwell. I wouldn't call it accidental, but his mother deliberately made his death - which she caused - look like an accident, in that she reported that he had left the home whilst she slept (and said he'd put his coat and shoes on), when really he had died when she'd lost her temper.
Surely that isn't very dissimilar to this case in so far as the story told regarding how the child came to be missing from the home contains the same elements - mother sleeping, child puts on coat and shoes himself and leaves the house?