Teen mom, 18, ‘locks crying daughter, 2, in car’ to watch Smurfs movie at theater while temperatures soar to 94F

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A TEEN mom left her baby in a car on a blazing hot day while she went and watched a kid’s movie, according to police.

The Florida mother went to the movie theater to watch Smurfs on Saturday when the incident occurred.

Columbia County Sheriff’s OfficeShe was charged with child neglect after the incident[/caption]

WFOX-TVWitnesses had called 911 on Merriex[/caption]

AlamyThe temperature was 97 with a heat index of 107, according to police[/caption]

Tipora Merriex, 18, took her baby out of a Lake City Regal Cinema after the child kept on crying through the film, according to a statement from police.

She then placed the 2-year-old in a 2002 Cadillac Escalade, leaving the child behind to finish the movie screening, police said.

“Witnesses confirmed Merriex remained inside the building while the child remained alone in extreme heat conditions,” the department wrote.

Officials have said that the temperature outside was 94 degrees, with a heat index of 107.

When police arrived at almost 6 p.m., the toddler was “visibly distressed.”

Officers had to break out a window to retrieve the child.

Her daughter was “flushed, sweating, and crying” when she was removed from the vehicle, according to police.

The baby had been in the car for at least 30 minutes.

It then said that the teenager was “nonchalant” about the ordeal, and did not think that the incident was a “big deal,” according to Law & Crime.

Merriex was with her younger siblings at the time of the incident.

At one point, the report says that she had even sent them outside to check on the baby during the movie.

She claimed that she accidentally locked herself out of the car.

“Our officers acted swiftly to ensure the safety of this young child,” Lake City Police Chief Gerald Butler said in a release.

“Leaving a child unattended in a vehicle under these conditions is unacceptable.”

Data collected from 1998 to 2024

Since 1998, NoHeatStroke.org has tracked child deaths in hot cars, offering one of the most comprehensive databases on the issue. Researchers say the site, along with the nonprofit Kids and Car Safety, fills a crucial gap due to the absence of standardized reporting nationwide. The observation was highlighted in a study published last year in the journal Traffic Injury Prevention.

Almost three-fourths of children who died of vehicular heatstroke, also known as vehicular hyperthermia, were 2 years old or younger.
Although 53% had been forgotten in parked automobiles, 24% got into a vehicle on their own.
The 10 states where pediatric vehicular heatstroke was most common are Alabama, Arizona, California, Florida, Georgia, Louisiana, North Carolina, Tennessee, Texas and Virginia.

The mother was released from jail on Tuesday after being arrested for child neglect.

“We are thankful the child is safe and urge all parents to prioritize the well-being of their child at all times,” Butler said.

When WJAX-TV went to the house after her arrest, her younger siblings told them that the baby was OK.

Last year, 39 children died in hot cars, according to the National Safety Council.

So far, 15 children have died in 2025 from being left in hot vehicles.

The most common circumstance is that the child was forgotten in the car, according to data from NoHeatStroke.org.

WFOX-TVThe teen mom claimed she had locked herself out of the car, according to a report[/caption] Published: [#item_custom_pubDate]

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