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18-Month-Old Dies After Being Left in Car for 10 Hours While Mom Socialized in NorCal: Sheriff’s Officials

Alexandrea Raven Mays, 23, is seen in a booking photo from 2017 released June 22, 2018, by the Mendocino County Sheriff’s Office.

A Northern California mother was arrested after allegedly leaving her young child in a car parked outside a friend’s house while she went inside to hang out, officials said Friday.

Alexandrea Raven Scott, 23, is accused of causing her 18-month-old son’s death by leaving him in the back seat with the windows rolled up for about 10 hours, the Mendocino County Sheriff’s Office said in a news release.

She allegedly deserted the boy around 3 a.m. Wednesday after arriving to visit with friends in Willits, along the 101 Freeway about halfway between Eureka and Santa Rosa.

Scott and the boy, identified as Chergery Teywoh Lew Mays, lived in Trinidad, a coastal town about 150 miles north of Willits near Redwood National Park, authorities said.

A San Jose State professor and former National Weather Service meteorologist told the Mercury News that Mays’ is the first vehicular heatstroke death in California this year. The temperature in Willits was about 80 degrees when the boy was found at 1 p.m., meaning it was about 130 degrees in the car, Jan Null said.

“It doesn’t have to be a blazing hot day for these to happen,” he told the newspaper. “They can happen anywhere, and happen to anyone.”

Sheriff’s officials became aware of the fatality around 1:30 p.m. after Scott took her son to a local hospital, where he was pronounced dead.

Investigators then went to the home where she had been socializing, where the vehicle Mays died in was still located, to collect evidence and speak with witnesses.

Scott was subsequently arrested on suspicion of willfully causing or permitting a child to suffer great bodily injury or death and was being held without bail, the Sheriff’s Office said.

Detectives are now looking to speak with anyone who may have information on Scott’s whereabouts between Tuesday, June 19, and Wednesday, June 20. Anyone with information can contact the Mendocino County Sheriff’s Office tip line at 707-234-2100.

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