In the recording, we hear a tragic and heart-wrenching incident when Jodie Edwards left her young child in a heated car for 8 hours.
Jodie, a professor and advisor at a private university in Cincinnati, spent the summer working two days a week and taking care of her two children: her then 3-year-old son and 11-month-old daughter, Jenna. On the days when Edwards was working, both children were under the care of a nanny near her office.
On August 20th, Edwards parked her car and went to work at Cincinnati Christian University, thinking she had already dropped off her child with the nanny. However, in reality, she had left her 11-month-old daughter in the van on a day when the temperature reached 92°F for the next eight hours.
When she returned to the vehicle, she realized that her daughter was still inside. Edwards called 911 at around 4:30 PM, but little Jenna had already passed away.
Describing the moment when she realized what had happened to Jenna, Edwards recalls that she began screaming and fell to the ground beside her minivan. "I had to lie on the ground. I couldn't even sit up." Emergency services and the police arrived at the scene, news helicopters were on their way, but her child was no longer alive.
The Hamilton County Coroner stated that Jenna Edwards died of hyperthermia when her body temperature reached 43,3 C degrees.
The Hamilton County Prosecutor announced that he would not press charges against the mother of the tragically deceased girl. The prosecutor defended his decision at a press conference, stating that there was no evidence that Jodie Edwards had intentionally left her daughter Jenna in the overheated van. "She has to live with this for the rest of her life," he said.
If Jodie Edwards had intentionally left the child in the car to harm her, she would have faced the death penalty.
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