Her toddlers died after she left them in a hot car as ‘a lesson.’ Now she’s going to prison.

© Provided by WP Company LLC d/b/a The Washington Post By Amy Wang A Texas woman whose two toddlers died in a hot car last year after sh...
© Provided by WP Company LLC d/b/a The Washington Post

By Amy Wang

A Texas woman whose two toddlers died in a hot car last year after she locked them inside to teach them “a lesson” was sentenced to 20 years in prison on Monday.

Cynthia Marie Randolph, 25, was found guilty of two counts of reckless injury to a child in the deaths last May of 2-year-old Juliet Ramirez and 16-month-old Cavanaugh Ramirez. Each count, a second-degree felony, carried with it a maximum sentence of 20 years in prison. Randolph will serve both sentences simultaneously, court records stated.

Randolph told investigators that she had been angry with her children, whom she found playing inside her car in the driveway on a hot day last May, and left them inside the vehicle, assuming they could get out themselves.

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So she went back inside their home, smoked marijuana, watched “Keeping Up With the Kardashians” and took a two- to three-hour nap, according to trial testimony, the Fort Worth Star-Telegram reported.

By the time she went back to check on the kids, they were unresponsive — and soon to be pronounced dead.

“Their lives were taken from them before they even had a chance to start,” prosecutor Abby Placke said Monday, according to CBS DFW.

But that account of the events wasn’t what Randolph originally told police.

On May 26, 2017, the day her two children were found dead, Randolph instead fabricated for investigators a mother’s nightmare: She said she had been folding laundry and watching television while Juliet and Cavanaugh played in an enclosed sun room on the back porch.

Randolph told police she went to check on her children after about a half-hour — but they were “gone.” She added that, after a half-hour of searching, she finally spotted their bodies, unresponsive, inside her 2010 Honda Crosstour parked in her driveway.

On that day, the high temperature outside Randolph’s home in Weatherford, Tex., reached 96 degrees, according to police records.

Medics pronounced both children dead at the scene, authorities said.

According to the Parker County Sheriff’s Office, when asked how long the children might have been exposed to the high temperatures inside the car, Randolph responded immediately: “No more than an hour.”

But in the weeks after her children were found dead, as investigators continued to interview Randolph, her explanation for what happened unraveled. Randolph “created several variations of the events” of May 26, police said — and was arrested less than a month after the tragedy.

In a final interview with investigators last June, Randolph described an entirely different timeline for what happened that day — one that began much earlier in the afternoon than she had previously admitted.

At about 12:15 p.m., Randolph said she had found her children playing inside her car and ordered them to come out, police said.

“Stop your [expletive],” Randolph said she told her 2-year-old daughter, according to police.

“When they refused to exit, Randolph told police she shut the car door to teach Juliet a lesson, thinking she could get herself and her brother out of the car when ready,” a probable cause affidavit for the incident stated. “The defendant went inside the house, smoked marijuana and took a nap. The defendant said she was asleep for two or three hours.”

It was only after her nap that Randolph found her children unresponsive inside the Honda Crosstour, police said. Randolph further told investigators that she broke the car window so that it would look like an accident, police said.

Randolph was arrested in June, and a grand jury indicted Randolph last summer on two counts of knowingly causing serious injury to a child, a first-degree felony, which would have carried life sentences. However, Randolph was convicted of the lesser charges as jurors did not find that she had acted with criminal intent, the Fort Worth Star Telegram reported.

“We thought that the evidence supported a finding that she acted knowingly,” prosecutor Kathleen Catania said Monday, according to CBS DFW. “This distinction was a pretty challenging one for jurors to make. We appreciate the jury’s dedication throughout this long and emotional trial.”

Over the past two decades, more than 700 children have died of heatstroke while in hot cars, said Jan Null, a meteorologist who compiles and keeps track of the data on noheatstroke.org.

“Every one of these can be prevented,” Null told The Washington Post in 2016.

Null said more than half of the incidents occurred because a child had been “forgotten” by a caregiver. About 28 percent of those deaths were because a child had been playing in an unattended vehicle. About 17 percent of the deaths resulted because a child was intentionally left inside a vehicle by an adult, Null’s site states.

The National Safety Council says that unintentionally leaving a child inside a car “can happen to anyone.”

“Maybe it’s an overworked parent who forgets to drop off their child at day care, or a relative who thinks the child will be okay ‘for just a few minutes,’ ” says an NSC pamphlet on the issue.

The group advises parents to put something they will need by their child’s car seat — a purse, wallet or phone, for example — as an additional reminder to check the back.

“Remember, children overheat four times faster than adults,” says a message on the council’s website. “A child is likely to die when his body temperature reaches 107 degrees, and that can happen in minutes.”

Those who see a child alone in a car are advised to call 911 immediately or even break into the car during an emergency, the group said, noting that many states have Good Samaritan laws.

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