Search Results for 'Bed Bath and Beyond'

Mother’s charges reduced in hot van case

By Brandon Ortiz
bortiz@herald-leader.com

A Fayette County grand jury Tuesday rejected a felony charge for a mother accused of leaving her child in a hot van outside of Bed Bath & Beyond, the mother’s defense attorney said.

Tanuja R. Patel

Tanuja R. Patel

But the grand jury did indict Tanuja R. Patel, 37, on a misdemeanor charge of second-degree wanton endangerment, which carries a maximum sentence of one year in county jail.

Patel was charged Sept. 6 with wanton endangerment. She had been facing up to five years in prison.

Her lawyer, Fred Peters of Lexington, said he’s pleased her charge was reduced.

“I am not saying she should get off scot-free, but she did not deserve a felony,” Peters said. “She made an error.”

On Sept. 6, a couple from Danville noticed a 3-year-old boy sleeping in child seat in a locked Honda Odyssey van on a hot day in the parking lot of the Nicholasville Road store. The couple says they knocked on the window and he did not respond. The van was not running and the air conditioner was off, they say.

The couple asked a Bed Bath & Beyond manager if they could use the store’s public-address system to alert the boy’s mother. The manager allegedly refused to use the PA system or call police for help.

The couple later called police on their own. A police officer broke the driver side window and rescued the boy, Ryan Patel, 3, who was not injured.

Peters says that Tanuja Patel thought she had left the van and air conditioning on. The van had a remote starter, but Patel was not aware that the van turns off after 15 minutes if the keys are not in the ignition, he said.

Peters has said the boy went without air conditioning for only a few minutes. But witnesses estimate it was more like 30 minutes or more.

Patel testified in her defense to the grand jury, Peters said. Her husband also testified about the van’s remote starter.

The Bed Bath & Beyond manager, Elizabeth A. Miller, has been charged with failure to report dependency, neglect and abuse. Miller has pleaded not guilty. Her case is pending.

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Child found dead in vehicle in Laurel County

By Steve Lannen

A 2 ½-year-old boy was found dead inside a locked vehicle Friday afternoon in London.

Madison Nose was found inside a Suzuki SUV with the windows rolled up about 4:30 p.m. The vehicle was parked in a parking lot near St. Joseph’s Hospital.

It appears as though the boy’s grandmother, who has not been identified, forgot to take him to day care and went to work at the hospital. The child was left in the back seat of the vehicle all day. He died of hyperthermia, Laurel County Coroner Douglas Bowling said.

Temperatures were in the low 80s in London on Friday. It likely was much hotter in the vehicle, Bowling said, but he could not say how hot.

Police took the woman into custody, but it was not clear whether she would face charges, Bowling said.

Earlier in Lexington

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Bed, Bath & Beyond manager pleads not guilty

By Shawntaye Hopkins
shopkins@herald-leader.com

A Bed, Bath & Beyond manager accused of refusing to help a Danville couple trying to call police about a child they found locked in a hot van in the parking lot pleaded not guilty to a misdemeanor charge.

Elizabeth A. Miller, 34, of Richmond, waived formal arraignment in Fayette District Court Thursday afternoon and was not present when her lawyer entered the plea on her behalf. She is charged with failing to report child dependency, neglect or abuse.

Miller was charged days after a couple found a toddler inside a van in the parking lot of the housewares store on Nicholasville Road.

On Sept. 5, Randy and Nancy Belcher said they noticed there was a boy in the van parked next to their vehicle. The boy did not respond to knocks on the van’s windows.

The Belchers thought the child’s parent was probably in Bed Bath & Beyond. They went into the store and were referred to Miller, who told the Belchers it was against store policy to get involved with anything happening in the store’s parking lot, Randy Belcher says. The Belchers say Miller would not let them use the phone or make an announcement over the store’s public-address system to alert the mother or parent that the child was in distress. A corporate spokesman has denied having such a store policy.

The Belchers then returned to their vehicle, got a cell phone and called police. Others in the parking lot also called police.

Police removed Ryan Patel, 3, from the van by breaking the window. He was treated at the scene for dehydration.

His mother, Tanuja Patel, was arrested and charged with first-degree wanton endangerment. She has pleaded not guilty to the charge.

Miller is scheduled to return to court at 10 a.m. Oct. 15 for a pretrial conference.

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Arraignment set for Bed Bath & Beyond manager

Herald-Leader staff report

A manager at Bed Bath & Beyond will be arraigned Sept. 25 in Fayette District Court for allegedly failing to help a child who was locked inside a hot van.

Elizabeth A. Miller, 34, of Richmond was charged last week with duty to report dependency, neglect and abuse after police learned she allegedly refused to call police for a Danville couple who found a 3-year-old locked in a hot van in the parking lot of the housewares store on Nicholasville Road. Miller told the couple that it was against store policy to get involved in activities in its parking lot, which a Bed Bath & Beyond corporate spokesman said was not the chain’s policy.

The charge is a misdemeanor.

If convicted, Miller could face a maximum of 90 days in jail and a $250 fine

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Store clerk charged with failing to help child locked in van

By Beth Musgrave

bmusgrave@herald-leader.com

UPDATED at 6:11 p.m.: Police have charged a Bed Bath & Beyond manager who allegedly refused to help a Danville couple trying to contact police after discovering a child locked in a hot van Saturday.

Lexington police Officer Tommy Puckett said Thursday that Elizabeth A. Miller, 34, of Richmond was issued a summons for duty to report dependency, neglect and abuse, a Class B misdemeanor that carries a maximum sentence of 90 days and a maximum fine of $250.

A court date for Miller has not been set.

Miller could not be reached for comment.

First Assistant Fayette County Attorney Brian Mattone told the Herald-Leader Thursday that under the statute, everyone has the duty to report dependency, neglect and abuse of a child if they have knowledge of it. He said prosecutors thought that Miller, through witnesses, had knowledge of possible abuse or neglect. Moreover, there is language in the statute stating that “nothing should relieve their obligation to report,” Mattone said.

Miller told witnesses and Puckett Saturday that it was the company’s policy not to get involved in any activity in the parking lot.

Randy and Nancy Belcher were at the Bed, Bath & Beyond off Nicholasville Road on Saturday when Nancy Belcher noticed that there was a boy in the van parked next to their vehicle. The boy, who was wearing long sleeves and was covered with a blanket, did not respond to repeated knocks on the van’s windows, Randy Belcher said.

Because of where the van was parked, the Belchers thought that the parent was probably in Bed Bath & Beyond.

The Belchers went into the housewares store and were referred to Miller, who told the Belchers that it was against store policy to get involved with anything happening in the store’s parking lot, Randy Belcher said. The Belchers said Miller would not let them use the phone or make an announcement over the store’s public-address system to alert the mother or parent that the child was in distress. The Belchers then returned to their vehicle — where their cell phone was locked inside — and called police. Others in the parking lot had also called police.

Police were able to remove Ryan Patel, 3, from the van by breaking the window. He was treated at the scene for dehydration. His mother, Tanuja Patel, was arrested and charged with first-degree wanton endangerment. She pleaded not guilty Monday.

Patel’s lawyer has said the mother thought the car was running when she left the toddler in the car.

A spokesman for Bed Bath & Beyond told the Herald-Leader on Monday that there is not a store policy banning employees from helping someone in its parking lots, and that the national chain was disappointed that the situation was not handled properly.

But it appears that Miller was not the only employee who thought store policy was not to call police. Debbie Price said she was shopping at the Bed Bath & Beyond store in Hamburg Pavilion last August when she was told something similar by a Bed Bath & Beyond employee. Price said Thursday that she had seen a dog — a small terrier mix — inside a car in the parking lot. The dog was lethargic and failed to respond to taps on the window, she said. Price said she went inside and asked a Bed Bath & Beyond employee whether she could use the phone to call police, and the employee told her that it was against store policy to get involved or call police.

“She was very apologetic about it,” Price recalled.

Price said that by the time she got out to the parking lot, the car’s owner was on her way to her vehicle.

Officials with Bed Bath & Beyond did not respond to e-mail and phone requests Thursday seeking comment.

Hank Reinhart, a vice president at Bed Bath & Beyond, said Monday, after repeated questions about the store’s policy regarding its parking lots, that there was no policy that would prevent store managers from helping someone in distress. Reinhart said the store was retraining its employees after what happened Saturday.

Mattone said Thursday that the county attorney’s office has researched the failure-to-report law extensively since Saturday. He said other states have successfully prosecuted people for failing to act on information that a child was in danger. It’s unclear whether a similar charge has been used in Kentucky.

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Store scrutinized for failing to help child in van

(Also read Bed Bath & Beyond Belief at http://mothertongue.bloginky.com/2008/09/08/bed-bath-beyond-belief/)

By Brandon Ortiz and Beth Musgrave
bortiz@herald-leader.com

UPDATED at 8:02 a.m.:

Prosecutors are reviewing state law to determine whether Bed Bath & Beyond should be charged for refusing to call police because a toddler was locked in a van in a Lexington parking lot.

First Assistant Fayette County Attorney Brian Mattone said he spent most of Sunday looking at Kentucky’s laws dealing with the reporting of child abuse. As of Monday evening, Mattone said, he had not yet decided whether Bed Bath & Beyond could be charged for failing to assist Randy and Nancy Belcher, a Danville couple who had discovered a child locked inside a van in the parking lot on Nicholasville Road.

Tanuja

Tanuja

A manager at the store told the couple — and later, police — that it was the store’s policy not to get involved in parking lot incidents.

But on Monday, an official at Bed Bath & Beyond’s corporate headquarters in New Jersey said in a written statement that the store manager must have been confused about the company’s policies.

“Be assured that, at Bed Bath & Beyond, we take matters such as these very seriously,” said Hank Reinhart, vice president of customer service. “We train our associates for emergency situations. Unfortunately, this situation was not handled in the way we would have expected it to be handled. We are taking this opportunity to retrain our associates.”

The child’s mother, Tanuja R. Patel, was arraigned Monday in Fayette District Court. She pleaded not guilty to first-degree wanton endangerment. Patel’s attorney, Fred Peters, said afterward that Patel thought she had left the van, a 2007 Honda Odyssey, running with the air conditioning on.

Peters said the level of her charge is “completely inappropriate.” Peters said Patel is being charged at the same level as someone who fires a gun at someone. At most, he said, the charge should have been child endangerment.

Mattone disagreed. Considering how long the mother was in the store, and how quickly cars can heat up, “it is such a dangerous situation it obviously could have been much worse,” he said.

Patel, 37, was released from the Fayette County Detention Center after posting a $5,000 cash bond. As a condition of the bond, she is not to have any contact with the child, 3-year-old Ryan Patel.

Peters said he is trying to get the conditions changed because the mother and child live in the same house.

A preliminary hearing for Tenuja Patel was scheduled for Sept. 26 in Fayette District Court.

Randy and Nancy Belcher were just getting out of their truck about 2:30 p.m. on Saturday when Nancy Belcher told her husband she thought there was a child in the van parked next to them. When the boy did not respond to several knocks on the window, they went into Bed Bath & Beyond and asked one of the clerks if they could use the public-address system to let customers know there was a child in a hot van.

The clerk called a manager who was less than helpful, Randy Belcher said Monday. “She said ‘we don’t deal with anything that goes on in our parking lot,’” Belcher said.

The manager also refused to phone the police or to let the Belchers use the store’s phone to dial 911. Randy Belcher had a phone locked inside his truck, and he eventually used it to call the police.

Lexington police Officer Tommy Puckett was among several officers who responded to the call on Saturday. After hearing the Belchers’ story, “I thought there must have been some kind of miscommunication,” he said Monday. But when Puckett went into the store and talked to the manager, who would not give her last name, she said it was against company policy to get involved with anything that happens in the parking lot.

“I was absolutely shocked speechless. This is one of the most disturbing things I’ve seen since I’ve been a cop,” said Puckett, an officer of nearly 35 years. “Morally, I just can’t believe that you would not call. What if that was your child out there?”

Michelle Bowe, of Nicholasville, said she saw the boy sleeping in a car seat inside the van on an 80-degree day. The van had its windows shut and was not running.

She said the sun was directly on the boy, who was wearing a long-sleeved shirt and pants and was under a blanket.

“You could see the sweat on him,” Bowe said. “I didn’t know if he was breathing. You couldn’t tell.”

Bowe said they talked about breaking a window to save the child, but then police arrived. Officers used a small device to break the window after the boy did not respond to repeated taps on the window, Belcher said. Even after the officer got the boy out, he wouldn’t wake, Belcher said.

“My heart just dropped to the ground,” Belcher said. “My wife was crying, the other woman was crying.”

Bowe and Belcher said the child had spent at least 20 to 30 minutes in the van.

According to a police report, Ryan awakened only after he was shaken by police. He was treated by paramedics and given fluids but was not taken to the hospital, witnesses said.

Reinhart said he knew of no Bed Bath & Beyond policy that would have prohibited the store manager from helping.

“We train our associates on how to respond to common emergency situations and we have no policies that should have impeded our ability to respond in this case,” Reinhart said. “This situation was not handled the way we would have expected it to be handled.”

Belcher said he was thankful that he and his wife and Bowe were there to help the boy. “I just want to thank the Lord that we were in the right place at the right time and that the boy is OK.”

Bowe, a mother of four, said she has peeked into the back seats of cars ever since hearing about an incident in the news a few years ago.

“I just kind of look in car windows, to be honest with you,” she said. “I mean, I have four children. When … you’re a mom, you’re just pretty cautious.”

Belcher said he and his wife had been going to buy something at the store on Saturday, but they decided to go home instead.

“I know we’re not going to go back in there,” he said.

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