Dad sends dick pics while son dies in hot car (1 Viewer)

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DirtyDiamonds

I'll swallow your soul!
The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

The father accused of killing his 22-month-old son by leaving him in a hot SUV will spend at least the next month in the Cobb County jail.

Justin Ross Harris, 33, of Marietta, was silent and showed no outward emotions during his brief appearance Thursday night before a judge. Because he’s been charged with murder, Harris could not be granted bond, Magistrate Judge John Strauss said.

Harris’ attorney, Mattox Kilgore, confirmed he and his client understood he was not eligible for bond. Harris will remain in the Cobb jail until his next court appearance, scheduled for July 15 in Superior Court.

While the investigation into the toddler’s death continues, questions lingered regarding how it could have happened.

Investigators consulted with Cobb County District Attorney Vic Reynolds before securing an arrest warrant for Harris. Reynolds said Thursday the investigation is “far, far from over.”

“I don’t know where this investigation will ultimately lead,” Reynolds said in a phone interview with AM 750 and 95.5 FM News/Talk WSB.

When a suspect is charged with a felony — such as cruelty to children in the first degree — which results in the loss of life, a murder charge is appropriate, Reynolds said.

“It’s just a terrible, God-awful situation,” Reynolds said. “I can’t imagine, I can’t fathom what any parent would be going through at this stage. It’s the type of case that affects the community.”

In addition to murder, Harris is charged with cruelty to children in the first degree, according to his arrest warrant.

“Said accused did leave a 22-month-old juvenile male unattended and strapped into a child car seat in a parked vehicle for approximately seven hours during daytime hours after which the child was found deceased,” the warrant states.

An autopsy will be conducted by the Cobb County Medical Examiner’s Office to determine the cause of death for the child, according to Sgt. Dana Pierce with Cobb police.

The child’s name was not released by police. But the Facebook page believed to belong to Harris shows several pictures of the boy, identified as Cooper.

Harris, who goes by Ross, is a Tuscaloosa, Ala., native who just passed the two-year mark of employment with Home Depot, according to his online profile. A Home Depot corporate office is located about two miles from the Akers Mill Road shopping center where Harris drove his son Wednesday afternoon. It was that parking lot where the boy was pronounced dead by emergency responders.

Harris graduated from the University of Alabama in 2012 with a degree in Management Information Systems, according to his LinkedIn page. His son was born in August of that year.

Harris, his wife and toddler were renting a condo off Terrell Mill Road, but hoped to buy a home, their landlord said Thursday.

Joe Saini, who rents the family their condo, said Harris and his wife are “very, very nice” people who were in love with their baby.

“Everything was going right for this couple,” Saini said. “They wanted to buy a house so they could have some space for their child to run around the backyard.”

Thursday afternoon, a handful of cars were parked outside the family’s condo. A man identifying himself as Justin Harris’ father, Reggie, came outside to walk the family dog.

“We have some pretty strong feelings but we can’t talk right now,” he said.

The investigation continues in the child’s death, according to police. Anyone with information that may assist detectives is asked to call 770-499-3945.

— Staff writer Craig Schneider contributed to this report.

EARLIER STORY: By the time a father realized he had left his toddler strapped in a carseat inside a steaming SUV all day Wednesday, it was too late. The 22-month-old was dead.

That father’s horrific realization turned into a frantic race to revive the child in the parking lot of a busy Cobb County shopping center Wednesday afternoon. The distraught man, whose name was not released, had to be handcuffed by arriving officers as witnesses and then paramedics administered CPR, according to Cobb County police.

“What have I done? What have I done?” witnesses heard the man scream. “I’ve killed our child.”

The toddler was supposed to have been dropped off at daycare Wednesday morning, sometime between 8:30 and 9, according to Sgt. Dana Pierce with Cobb police. Instead, the child was left in the backseat of a Hyundai Tucson, and the father went to work, Pierce said. The father told police he somehow forgot his child was in the backseat of the four-door SUV, but police released no explanation for how the toddler was overlooked. The child, whose name and gender were not released, was pronounced dead at the scene by the Cobb County Medical Examiner’s Office.

Wednesday’s death is the second in two days involving children left in cars, coming one day after a 9-month-old Florida girl died after being left in her father’s pickup truck, according to reports. The child in Cobb County is believed to be the 14th to die from heatstroke inside a vehicle this year in the United States, according to KidsAndCars.org, which tracks fatalities involving children and vehicles. Last year, 43 children died after being left in vehicles, according to the Department of Earth and Climate Sciences at San Francisco State University.

High temperatures Wednesday reached the low 90s, according to Channel 2 Action News meteorologist Brad Nitz. Within 10 minutes of being inside a closed vehicle, temperatures inside can rise an average of 19 degrees, according to the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration.

Shortly after 4 p.m., the man was leaving an office in the Cumberland Mall area when he realized his child was in medical distress, according to police. From U.S. 41, the man turned on to Akers Mill Road and into the Akers Mill Square shopping center, witnesses said.

Behind a strip row of small restaurants, the man screamed for help and called 911.

“Apparently he forgot the child was in the carseat,” Pierce said at the scene. “When the father discovered the 22-month-old in the backseat, he immediately got out of the car.”

Witnesses rushed to the SUV and began administering CPR, seconds before both police officers and firefighters arrived at the scene. Several officers were already patrolling the area at the time, Pierce said. One witness, Dale Hamilton, said he initially thought the child was choking, but quickly learned otherwise.

“He pulled him out, laid him on the ground, and tried to resuscitate him,” Hamilton said.

Restaurant patrons and others in the shopping center gathered on the sidewalks, hoping for the best. It didn’t happen.

“He was lifeless, he was in the same position as if he were sitting in the carseat,” Hamilton said. “It’s something that I’ll remember for a long time.”

While officers investigated the child’s death, the father was driven away from the shopping center in the back of a patrol car. He was taken to police headquarters for questioning, Pierce said. It was not known late Wednesday if any charges would be filed.

In a high-profile Atlanta case, the owner of a Jonesboro daycare and her daughter were convicted in the 2011 death of a 2-year-old Jazmin Green, who was left in a closed van for about three hours on a sweltering June afternoon.

http://www.ajc.com/news/news/breaking-news/child-believed-left-in-car-in-cobb-has-died/ngNdR/


Justin, Leanna, and Cooper Harris
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harrisandwife.jpg

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Béla Kiss

Always, never, and forget about it.
“He was lifeless, he was in the same position as if he were sitting in the carseat,” Hamilton said. “It’s something that I’ll remember for a long time.”
This sentence gave me goosebumps.

What a tragedy. How in the fuck do you forget your kid in the car for 7 hours?
I'm not sure if I feel spiteful or sorry for the dad. A bit of both I think.
 

D.N.R.

Medication time
Someone needs to bake this fucker in a hot car. With his wife.
I agree. I think she was involved. Both of them had done online searches about hot car deaths and how long it takes an animal to die in a hot car. He had also been searching 'child free' living.
He was sexting with 6 females, one of them was 17 years old. I think the mom went along with his plan because she didn't want him to leave her. Fucking disgusting.
 
I agree. I think she was involved. Both of them had done online searches about hot car deaths and how long it takes an animal to die in a hot car. He had also been searching 'child free' living.
He was sexting with 6 females, one of them was 17 years old. I think the mom went along with his plan because she didn't want him to leave her. Fucking disgusting.

links?
 

DirtyDiamonds

I'll swallow your soul!
http://www.al.com/news/index.ssf/2014/07/justin_ross_harris_hearing_bri.html
COBB COUNTY, Georgia -- A three-hour preliminary hearing today in the hot-car death of a Georgia toddler revealed stunning allegations against father Justin Ross Harris.

Prosecutors said Harris, a 33-year-old Tuscaloosa native, lived an "alternative lifestyle," was sexting six different women while young Cooper Harris was dying in Harris' sweltering SUV, including sending and receiving nude pictures, and had carried out various concerning internet searches, including "How to survive prison."

After hearing from both sides, Superior Court Judge Frank Cox ruled there was enough evidence against Harris to take the case to a grand jury. Cox also ordered that Harris remain jailed without bond. Harris is charged with felony murder and child cruelty.

Cobb County police Det. Phil Stoddard testified the boy's mother, Leanna Harris, was the first in the family to wake that day at about 6:30 a.m.

Ross Harris and Cooper stayed in bed watching cartoons a little longer, getting up and dressed about 7 a.m. Later that morning, Ross Harris took his son to Chick-fil-A, which Stoddard said Harris did several times a month.

"It was a Daddy-son time,'' Stoddard said. "It was a special occasion for them." The detective said they reviewed surveillance video from the restaurant and "the child appeared wide-awake and happy'' as they left.

After leaving the restaurant at 9:19 a.m., Stoddard said Ross Harris strapped Cooper into his rear-facing car seat. Because of the dimensions of the Hyundai Tuscson, a small SUV, the top of the car seat was only about six inches from Ross Harris' head, and protruded in between the two front seats, the detective said.

Ross Harris arrived at work about 9:25 a.m. Throughout the day, he talked on an inner-office chat with several friends, making plans for lunch and a 5 p.m. movie -- 22nd Jump Street. He went to lunch with friends at Publix, and then made a stop at Home Depot to buy light bulbs.

Harris' friends dropped him off at this SUV, at which time police said he opened the door to his vehicle, turned his head to one side and "tossed" the package of light bulbs into the vehicle.

When he got into his vehicle to leave the office about 4:15 p.m., Harris didn't roll down the windows, despite the day's hot temperatures, Stoddard testified. He then drove less than two miles before he pulled into a strip mall, jumped out of the SUV, and pulled Cooper from his car seat.

Stoddard said Harris put Cooper on the hot pavement and, Stoddard testified, didn't call 911, nor perform CPR. Instead, Stoddard said, his behavior as described by the first witness on the scene was erratic. He would scream one minute, and then just have a blank stare the next, Stoddard testified.

While witnesses performed CPR, Harris walked around to the other side of the car and got on his cell phone. He was heard by officers on the scene telling whoever was on the other end of the line that his child had died, but police said Harris told them he was never able to reach anyone he called.

Stoddard testified that when officers told Harris to get off of his phone at the scene, he said, "No." When they asked again, he told them, "(Expletive) you."

His phone records showed a different story, Stoddard said. Logs showed he called his wife, and Home Depot twice, which included a six-minute call to Home Depot's daycare, Little Aprons, where Cooper attended.

When Harris told police he forgot his son was in the car, Stoddard said, he gave the excuse that Cooper had fallen asleep. It was less than a minute drive from the restaurant to the daycare, Stoddard said, and daycare workers told police Cooper was always awake and excited on days they went to Chick-fil-A.

Harris told police that after strapping Cooper into the car seat, they kissed each other good-bye. Harris said he made it a point to always do that in case they got into a fatal car crash. He wanted their last moment together to be one of "loving," he told police.

Authorities said while at work that day, Harris received a group email from the daycare. His attorney, Maddox Kilgore, said Harris texted his wife at 3:16 p.m. that day and said, "When are you going to get my buddy?" Police said they saw no texts between Harris and his wife that day.

Police did say, however, Harris was texting six other women while Cooper was dying in the SUV. They say records show he was sending and receiving explicit texts , including nude images of himself and the women, which included a teen girl. He had also made plans to meet with at least one of them.

The teen girl, Stoddard testified, is 17 now, but was 16 when she and Harris began 'sexting.'
Harris' attorney objected to the "sexting" line of questioning, but the judge allowed it. Prosecutor Chuck Boring said the questions helped to establish motive since Leanna Harris told police she and her husband were having "intimacy" problems. .

In one of the text conversations with another woman, Stoddard said, the woman asked Harris, "Do you even have a conscience?" Harris' reply was "Nope,'' the detective testified.

The prosecution said Harris visited a subreddit website about "people who die," which shows videos of people dying. He also visited a subreddit site called Child-Free. "They advocate not having any more children and adding to the biomass I guess is the best way to put it,'' Stoddard said.

Harris also searched "how to survive in prison" and "age of consent for Georgia."

The detective testified that Leanna Harris went to the daycare to pick up Cooper. She arrived there at 4:51 p.m. and was told that Cooper never came in that day. The mother's first words, police said, were: "Ross must have left him in the car."

When a daycare worker told Leanna Harris there were a "million" other reasons why Cooper never showed up, Leanna Harris immediately said, "No." She didn't show any emotion, police said, but did say it was her "worst nightmare."

Police said she never asked to see Cooper, but did asked to see her husband. She called her mother, who screamed and cried loudly and asked Leanna Harris why she wasn't crying. Leanna Harris' reply was, "I must be in shock."

Detectives put the husband and wife in a room together. Stoddard testified that it was in that room that Harris became emotional but that, "It was all about him,'' the detective said. It during that time together that Leanna Harris asked her husband, "Did you say too much?" police said.

Harris described to his wife how Cooper looked when he pulled him out of the vehicle. He told her Cooper looked peaceful, and that his eyes and mouth were closed. He also told his wife, "I dreaded how he would look,'' Stoddard testified.

In fact, police said, Cooper was in full rigor, the car smelled of decomposition even hours after the body was removed, and Cooper's eyes were partially open, as was his mouth. His tongue was protruding through his lips.

Stoddard testified that when police told Harris they were charging him, Harris replied, "But there was no malicious intent."

Witness Leonard Madden, who was on the scene that day, said he didn't see anything suspicious in Harris' behavior, he testified. He said he first thought Cooper was a doll, and then realized otherwise when he got closer. Harris, Madden said, was yelling "Oh, my God! Oh, my God, my son is dead!"

He said he felt Harris' pain. "I even wept," Madden testified.

Police testified that the parents had two life insurance policies on Cooper totaling $27,000. Stoddard testified that his wife had alluded to some financial difficulties and a $4,000 credit card balance. The detective said Harris had been passed over for a promotion at Home Depot, had interviewed but not gotten a job with Chick-fil-A, and had been depressed.

Defense Attorney Maddox Kilgore called several of Harris' friends to the stand.

Alex Hall, who attended the University of Alabama with Harris and worked with him, said Harris acted normal when they, along with friend and coworker Winston Milling, went to lunch. "He said he loved his son all the time," Hall said.

Milling agreed. "He loved showing Cooper off to everybody,'' Milling testified.

The defense's character witnesses included Harris' brother, Sgt. Michael Baygents who works at the Law Enforcement Academy in Tuscaloosa, and the children's pastor at the Harris' church in Georgia.

Both testified that they thought Harris should be granted bail because the Harris they know isn't a flight risk nor would he commit any crimes if out on bail.

The prosecution again pointed out the "sexting" allegations and asked if it was fair to say they obviously didn't know everything about him.

Kilgore, the defense attorney, asked the judge to dismiss the charges against Harris. He said there wasn't enough evidence against him to even support a misdemeanor, and said Harris simply forgot his son was in the car.

"Ross pulled out of Chick-fil-A and his mind went elsewhere,'' Kilgore said. "We forget in an instant because our mind races ahead."

"The results of forgetting in this case were absolutely catastrophic, but an accident doesn't become a crime because the results are catastrophic,'' Kilgore said.

Boring said in closing that he believed Harris knew what he was doing, and did it intentionally. He went back to the lunchtime visit at the car, and the fact that Harris tossed the fragile light bulbs into the SUV. He didn't get into the SUV, Boring said, "Because he knew what he was going to find."




 

LilyCuster

Premium Member Bitches!
Tragic. Absolutely horrifyingly tragic.

I keep waiting for Jose Baez to show up on the story. This case sounds right up his alley.
 
http://www.al.com/news/index.ssf/2014/07/justin_ross_harris_hearing_bri.html
COBB COUNTY, Georgia -- A three-hour preliminary hearing today in the hot-car death of a Georgia toddler revealed stunning allegations against father Justin Ross Harris.

Prosecutors said Harris, a 33-year-old Tuscaloosa native, lived an "alternative lifestyle," was sexting six different women while young Cooper Harris was dying in Harris' sweltering SUV, including sending and receiving nude pictures, and had carried out various concerning internet searches, including "How to survive prison."

After hearing from both sides, Superior Court Judge Frank Cox ruled there was enough evidence against Harris to take the case to a grand jury. Cox also ordered that Harris remain jailed without bond. Harris is charged with felony murder and child cruelty.

Cobb County police Det. Phil Stoddard testified the boy's mother, Leanna Harris, was the first in the family to wake that day at about 6:30 a.m.

Ross Harris and Cooper stayed in bed watching cartoons a little longer, getting up and dressed about 7 a.m. Later that morning, Ross Harris took his son to Chick-fil-A, which Stoddard said Harris did several times a month.

"It was a Daddy-son time,'' Stoddard said. "It was a special occasion for them." The detective said they reviewed surveillance video from the restaurant and "the child appeared wide-awake and happy'' as they left.

After leaving the restaurant at 9:19 a.m., Stoddard said Ross Harris strapped Cooper into his rear-facing car seat. Because of the dimensions of the Hyundai Tuscson, a small SUV, the top of the car seat was only about six inches from Ross Harris' head, and protruded in between the two front seats, the detective said.

Ross Harris arrived at work about 9:25 a.m. Throughout the day, he talked on an inner-office chat with several friends, making plans for lunch and a 5 p.m. movie -- 22nd Jump Street. He went to lunch with friends at Publix, and then made a stop at Home Depot to buy light bulbs.

Harris' friends dropped him off at this SUV, at which time police said he opened the door to his vehicle, turned his head to one side and "tossed" the package of light bulbs into the vehicle.

When he got into his vehicle to leave the office about 4:15 p.m., Harris didn't roll down the windows, despite the day's hot temperatures, Stoddard testified. He then drove less than two miles before he pulled into a strip mall, jumped out of the SUV, and pulled Cooper from his car seat.

Stoddard said Harris put Cooper on the hot pavement and, Stoddard testified, didn't call 911, nor perform CPR. Instead, Stoddard said, his behavior as described by the first witness on the scene was erratic. He would scream one minute, and then just have a blank stare the next, Stoddard testified.

While witnesses performed CPR, Harris walked around to the other side of the car and got on his cell phone. He was heard by officers on the scene telling whoever was on the other end of the line that his child had died, but police said Harris told them he was never able to reach anyone he called.

Stoddard testified that when officers told Harris to get off of his phone at the scene, he said, "No." When they asked again, he told them, "(Expletive) you."

His phone records showed a different story, Stoddard said. Logs showed he called his wife, and Home Depot twice, which included a six-minute call to Home Depot's daycare, Little Aprons, where Cooper attended.

When Harris told police he forgot his son was in the car, Stoddard said, he gave the excuse that Cooper had fallen asleep. It was less than a minute drive from the restaurant to the daycare, Stoddard said, and daycare workers told police Cooper was always awake and excited on days they went to Chick-fil-A.

Harris told police that after strapping Cooper into the car seat, they kissed each other good-bye. Harris said he made it a point to always do that in case they got into a fatal car crash. He wanted their last moment together to be one of "loving," he told police.

Authorities said while at work that day, Harris received a group email from the daycare. His attorney, Maddox Kilgore, said Harris texted his wife at 3:16 p.m. that day and said, "When are you going to get my buddy?" Police said they saw no texts between Harris and his wife that day.

Police did say, however, Harris was texting six other women while Cooper was dying in the SUV. They say records show he was sending and receiving explicit texts , including nude images of himself and the women, which included a teen girl. He had also made plans to meet with at least one of them.

The teen girl, Stoddard testified, is 17 now, but was 16 when she and Harris began 'sexting.'
Harris' attorney objected to the "sexting" line of questioning, but the judge allowed it. Prosecutor Chuck Boring said the questions helped to establish motive since Leanna Harris told police she and her husband were having "intimacy" problems. .

In one of the text conversations with another woman, Stoddard said, the woman asked Harris, "Do you even have a conscience?" Harris' reply was "Nope,'' the detective testified.

The prosecution said Harris visited a subreddit website about "people who die," which shows videos of people dying. He also visited a subreddit site called Child-Free. "They advocate not having any more children and adding to the biomass I guess is the best way to put it,'' Stoddard said.

Harris also searched "how to survive in prison" and "age of consent for Georgia."

The detective testified that Leanna Harris went to the daycare to pick up Cooper. She arrived there at 4:51 p.m. and was told that Cooper never came in that day. The mother's first words, police said, were: "Ross must have left him in the car."

When a daycare worker told Leanna Harris there were a "million" other reasons why Cooper never showed up, Leanna Harris immediately said, "No." She didn't show any emotion, police said, but did say it was her "worst nightmare."

Police said she never asked to see Cooper, but did asked to see her husband. She called her mother, who screamed and cried loudly and asked Leanna Harris why she wasn't crying. Leanna Harris' reply was, "I must be in shock."

Detectives put the husband and wife in a room together. Stoddard testified that it was in that room that Harris became emotional but that, "It was all about him,'' the detective said. It during that time together that Leanna Harris asked her husband, "Did you say too much?" police said.

Harris described to his wife how Cooper looked when he pulled him out of the vehicle. He told her Cooper looked peaceful, and that his eyes and mouth were closed. He also told his wife, "I dreaded how he would look,'' Stoddard testified.

In fact, police said, Cooper was in full rigor, the car smelled of decomposition even hours after the body was removed, and Cooper's eyes were partially open, as was his mouth. His tongue was protruding through his lips.

Stoddard testified that when police told Harris they were charging him, Harris replied, "But there was no malicious intent."

Witness Leonard Madden, who was on the scene that day, said he didn't see anything suspicious in Harris' behavior, he testified. He said he first thought Cooper was a doll, and then realized otherwise when he got closer. Harris, Madden said, was yelling "Oh, my God! Oh, my God, my son is dead!"

He said he felt Harris' pain. "I even wept," Madden testified.

Police testified that the parents had two life insurance policies on Cooper totaling $27,000. Stoddard testified that his wife had alluded to some financial difficulties and a $4,000 credit card balance. The detective said Harris had been passed over for a promotion at Home Depot, had interviewed but not gotten a job with Chick-fil-A, and had been depressed.

Defense Attorney Maddox Kilgore called several of Harris' friends to the stand.

Alex Hall, who attended the University of Alabama with Harris and worked with him, said Harris acted normal when they, along with friend and coworker Winston Milling, went to lunch. "He said he loved his son all the time," Hall said.

Milling agreed. "He loved showing Cooper off to everybody,'' Milling testified.

The defense's character witnesses included Harris' brother, Sgt. Michael Baygents who works at the Law Enforcement Academy in Tuscaloosa, and the children's pastor at the Harris' church in Georgia.

Both testified that they thought Harris should be granted bail because the Harris they know isn't a flight risk nor would he commit any crimes if out on bail.

The prosecution again pointed out the "sexting" allegations and asked if it was fair to say they obviously didn't know everything about him.

Kilgore, the defense attorney, asked the judge to dismiss the charges against Harris. He said there wasn't enough evidence against him to even support a misdemeanor, and said Harris simply forgot his son was in the car.

"Ross pulled out of Chick-fil-A and his mind went elsewhere,'' Kilgore said. "We forget in an instant because our mind races ahead."

"The results of forgetting in this case were absolutely catastrophic, but an accident doesn't become a crime because the results are catastrophic,'' Kilgore said.

Boring said in closing that he believed Harris knew what he was doing, and did it intentionally. He went back to the lunchtime visit at the car, and the fact that Harris tossed the fragile light bulbs into the SUV. He didn't get into the SUV, Boring said, "Because he knew what he was going to find."





Thanks DD <3
 

Snicker

Sickest Bitch
I actually felt sorry for this cunt when I first heard about this. But after hearing what really went on there's no doubt in my mind he should be hung for doing that to his poor baby. Bastard. I hope he rots in hell.
 

Pixiedust

Serial Killer has been made.....
May God have Cooper and all these poor unloved children in his arms.....I say unloved for the satisfaction of knowing how much I love my son and in his nearly 15 years of life, I have never "forgotten" where he was or where he was suppose to be. I hope justice is long and slow for all involved......
 

shanksta

Unforgiven-
May God have Cooper and all these poor unloved children in his arms.....I say unloved for the satisfaction of knowing how much I love my son and in his nearly 15 years of life, I have never "forgotten" where he was or where he was suppose to be. I hope justice is long and slow for all involved......
:rose:
 
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