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22-year-old mother returned to her vehicle only to find her 7-month-old son unresponsive after she left him inside during a hot day while she was at work; mother arrested

Georgia – In a shocking incident in Georgia, a 7‑month‑old boy died after being left inside a car during a hot day by his 22‑year‑old mother, identified as N. Simmons, who was working her shift. The mother now faces second‑degree murder and child cruelty charges, according to the Georgia Bureau of Investigation. Authorities say the infant had been trapped in the vehicle on a day when temperatures outside reached 88 degrees and likely soared much higher inside the closed car.

Simmons, an employee at a local car dealership, is accused of leaving her infant in her parked car during work hours. Though the exact duration has not been confirmed, investigators believe the baby was left unattended long enough for extreme heat to overwhelm him. When Simmons returned to the vehicle and discovered her son unresponsive, she drove him straight to the hospital. Despite immediate efforts from medical staff, the infant could not be revived. Hospital officials contacted law enforcement, prompting a rapid response from the Sheriff’s Office, who in turn called in the Georgia Bureau of Investigation to assist in what quickly turned into a criminal investigation.

Following the incident, the child’s body was sent for autopsy. According to reports, the process began the day after the death, on October 17, but officials informed the public not to expect quick results. As Coroner M. Fowler explained, “If there is not any trauma to the child or injuries to the child, then a lot of time, you got to wait on [toxicology] and the histology, all of that, to come in and see what happened.”

The timeline began to unfold on October 16, when Simmons arrived for work and, according to investigators, left her child inside her car. No signs of forced entry or damage were reported, suggesting the vehicle was locked. As the sun climbed, so did the internal temperature of the car, conditions that can reach lethal levels in minutes for a small child. By the time Simmons returned to the car, her baby was unconscious. In a desperate move, she drove him directly to the hospital, where staff alerted law enforcement and attempted resuscitation. Deputy Coroner R. Clements and other officials were quickly dispatched. The child was pronounced dead shortly after arrival.

The Georgia heat, combined with the enclosed space of a vehicle, created conditions deadly enough to kill even within a short window. Experts say the internal temperature of a car can exceed 120 degrees on an 88-degree day. As investigators gathered evidence from the dealership and hospital, the Georgia Bureau of Investigation officially joined the case. After building sufficient probable cause, Simmons was arrested on November 3. She remains incarcerated at the county jail, with no bond issued. With the autopsy results still pending, the prosecution awaits full medical findings to determine whether heatstroke was the definitive cause of death. While the child’s name has not been released, officials confirm that the infant died while Simmons was at work—a detail that has sparked outrage and grief across the community.

The legal proceedings are only beginning, but the charges Simmons faces, including second-degree murder and cruelty to a child, carry serious penalties under Georgia law. If convicted, she could face decades in prison. As families across Georgia mourn the loss of a life that had just begun, this case serves as a devastating reminder of how quickly a warm day can turn deadly. Hot-car deaths, though preventable, remain tragically common, and this incident underscores the life-or-death stakes of a single forgotten moment.

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