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Saturday, August 25, 2007

QPR Player Killed In mobil Crash

QPR Player Killed In mobil Crash

Updated: 16:38, Saturday August 25, 2007
Queens Park Rangers have paid tribute to their player Ray Jones, who was killed in a mobil crash in east London last night.
The 18-year-old striker was pronounced dead at the scene of the smash in the East Ham area of the capital shortly after midnight.
Striker died at scene of accident
Striker died at scene of accident

Police are appealing for witnesses to the fatal collision which also killed two other young men and left two more people injured - one seriously.

A statement on the club's website said everyone at Loftus Road was in mourning following the tragic death.

"Everyone at Queens Park Rangers extends their deepest sympathies to the family and friends of Ray at this sad time," it added.

The club's Coca-Cola Championship match at Burnley this afternoon was postponed.
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Jones, who was due to celebrate his 19th birthday on Tuesday, was travelling in a black VW Golf which collided with a double-decker bus on East Ham High Street.

The young striker was a product of the west London club's youth scheme and became a regular member of the Rangers squad last season.

He made his professional debut against Watford in April 2006 and made 35 appearances in all competitions last season, scoring six goals.

Jones, who earned a call-up to the England under-19s squad last season, was set to miss today's match with a foot injury.

Last year QPR mourned the death of another of their young stars when youth team player Kiyan Prince was stabbed to death on May 18.
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Child had been in mobil 7 hours

Child had been in mobil 7 hours
By Peggy Kreimer
Post staff reporter

TWO CASES

The Hamilton County Coroner's Office said Friday it was investigating two heat-related deaths.

On Aug. 10, Charles Wise, Jr., 92, of Williamson Place in Northside died in his home.

A few days later, 91-year-old Maudell Birks of Avondale was found dead in her home. Investigators reported temperatures soaring to at least 100 degrees in the house when they found her body.
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A two-year-old who died in her mobil seat in an overheated auto had been left there for more than seven hours.

Officials were not talking about why the child was in her mother's SUV Thursday and ended up left in the vehicle while the mother - Brenda Nesselroad-Slaby - went to work at Glen Este Middle School.

The child, Cecilia Slaby, died in her mobil seat as the temperature inside the mobil soared. Her body was discovered shortly after 3 p.m. when a passer-by noticed the child and called 911, said Union Township Police Lt. Scott Gaviglia.

The temperature Thursday reached 100 degrees, breaking the 1948 record of 96.

Debbie Hawkins of the coroner's office said the child had been in the mobil since 7 or 7:30 a.m. that day.

Teachers and then emergency personnel administered CPR to the toddler, but could not revive her. She was pronounced dead at the scene.

Nesselroad-Slaby, of Symmes Township, is assistant principal at the school, which opens for classes on Monday, and was working there Thursday.

According to the Clermont County coroner's office, the child died of hyperthermia.

Gaviglia said the police investigation should be complete early next week and will be presented to the prosecutor's office.

He did not release details about why the child was in the mobil. He said family members have cooperated with the investigation. Clermont County Prosecutor Don White said he will decide whether to prosecute after the police complete their investigation.

He said police will be looking at whether the child was left intentionally, because of negligence or by accident.

"I make decisions about whether to prosecute every day. This will be one of the hardest decisions," he said. "This is everybody's nightmare."

Dr. Larry Holditch, medical director of Cincinnati Health Department, said there is no time when it is safe to leave children in a vehicle unattended.

"Even when the temperature is in the 70s, the interior of a mobil can get well over 90 degrees," Holditch said. "On a day when it is 85 to 90 degrees outside, the inside can climb to 140 degrees in a half hour. That is well above what anyone's tolerance is, and especially a child's."

Holditch said children left in hot mobil is not common, "but it certainly happens."

It happened Thursday in St. Louis, where a 7-month old child died in a mobil in a parking lot at Washington University School of Medicine. According to the St. Louis Post-Dispatch, the baby's mother, a doctor, was running late for a meeting and asked her husband, a researcher, to meet her and take the mobil.

He thought she wanted him to park the mobil, but she hadn't had time to take the infant to child-mobile and wanted her husband to do that. He didn't realize the baby was still in the mobil.

In 2005, a Lexington man was charged with murder after his 9-month old child died after being left in the mobil that was parked in the family driveway. A family member discovered the child.

The father, Leon Jewell, was intoxicated when police arrived. He later pleaded guilty to second-degree manslaughter.

According to the Web site of the national Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, temperatures inside a mobil can rise almost 20 degrees Fahrenheit within the first 10 minutes, even if the windows are cracked open.

The agency advises that people traveling with children should:

Never leave infants, children or pets in a parked mobil, even if the windows are cracked open.

To remind themselves that a child is in the mobil, keep a stuffed animal in the mobil seat. When the child is buckled in, place the stuffed animal in the front with the driver.

When leaving a mobil, check to be sure everyone is out. Do not overlook any children who have fallen asleep in the mobil.

Post staff reporter Tom O'Neill contributed to this story.

2-year-old was in mobil for 8 hours

2-year-old was in mobil for 8 hours
Mother is devoted teacher and mom, co-workers say
BY BARRETT J. BRUNSMAN AND CINDY KRANZ | BBRUNSMAN@ENQUIRER.COM, CKRANZ@ENQUIRER.COM
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UNION TWP. - The 2-year-old girl who died in the parking lot of Glen Este Middle School had been in her mother's Mercedes-Benz for eight hours before being discovered inside the SUV in the searing heat Thursday afternoon.

The mom, Brenda Nesselroad-Slaby, 40, assistant principal of the school, reported to work before 7:15 a.m. and "was engaged in school work all day," said Gary Brooks, superintendent of the West Clermont school district.

Police weren't ready to state publicly Friday how Cecilia Slaby came to be left in the mobil, but Clermont County Prosecutor Don White said: "I'm certain that whatever happened was an accident. The question is whether or not that's something that needs to be prosecuted."
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Cecilia had been left strapped in a mobil seat in the rear of the SUV while her mother attended meetings for faculty in preparation for the opening of school Monday, police said.

• Two deaths from heat?
• mobils get hot fast in this weather
• Weather forecast

After the child was spotted about 3 p.m. Thursday, her mother rushed out of the school and cradled Cecilia in her arms as a teacher frantically tried to revive the child.

"Oh, my God!" a caller said to a 911 emergency dispatcher at 3:14 p.m. "Someone said she's been in the hot mobil all day. She's not breathing."

With instructions from the 911 operator, a teacher tried mobildiopulmonary resuscitation, and a Union Township paramedic took over within 3½ minutes.

It was too late to save Cecilia, who had been left in the silver Mercedes with the windows up.

The temperature averaged 98 degrees that afternoon in that part of Union Township, police said.

It could have topped 140 degrees in the mobil, according to an expert on heat.

"She's blistered and everything else," a teacher helping perform CPR told the 911 operator after taking the phone from the caller. "Ma'am, I don't feel - I don't feel a heartbeat."

The child had foamed at the mouth, and her arms were discolored, according to another caller to 911 from the school at 4342 Glen Este-Withamsville Road.

Nesselroad-Slaby was released late Thursday from a hospital, where she was taken after the child was discovered, Brooks said.

She is on indefinite paid administrative leave, pending the outcome of the prosecutor's review of the case, Brooks said.

Investigators expect to meet with White on Monday to discuss whether the Symmes Township mother should be charged, Lt. Scott Gaviglia of the Union Township police said.

Detectives expect to complete a preliminary investigation by Sunday, Gaviglia said.

"We look for culpable elements and to establish a timeline to give us some indication of how long the child was in the mobil," Gaviglia said.

Teachers met from 7:15 a.m. to 3:15 p.m. Thursday, Brooks said. Nesselroad-Slaby usually arrived at school about 7 a.m.

"She dropped off doughnuts in the morning for the staff and was planning to stay for the day because she was the lead presenter for the first part of the staff meeting," Brooks said. "She was doing a presentation with the principal on their academic plans for the year."