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Alabama grandfather charged after 2-year-old boy left in hot car for 7 hours dies

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"Hot Cars Act" seeks to protect children from car heatstroke accidents 07:38

An Alabama man is facing a reckless manslaughter charge after his 2-year-old grandson died when he was left in a hot vehicle for seven hours, authorities said Wednesday.

Two-year-old Ian Wiesman died Tuesday after being left inside a truck for seven hours as late summer temperatures hovered around 90 degrees, authorities said. William "Bill" Wiesman, 56, is being charged with reckless manslaughter and criminally negligent homicide for the death of his grandson, authorities said.

Bill Wiesman told authorities he thought he had dropped his grandson at day care that morning, and did not notice the child still strapped in a car seat as he went to work. Blount County District Attorney Pamela Casey said Wiesman returned to the truck three times that day, but told authorities he did not notice the child.

The toddler, who was strapped in a forward-facing car seat behind the driver's seat, was discovered when Weisman drove to the day care around 3 p.m. Tuesday, authorities said.

"He went back to the day care thinking he had left the child there, but had been in the vehicle three times that day from the time he picked the child up until the time he returned to the day care," Casey said.

The district attorney announced the arrest warrants during a news conference. The charges indicate authorities believe the child's death was unintentional. "These are not intentional acts. These are negligent acts and or reckless acts," Casey said of the charges. She said the investigation is ongoing.

It is unclear if Wiesman has an attorney who could speak on his behalf.

Casey, the mother of two young children, fought back tears when asked about the emotions surrounding the child's death. "It's awful. My heart breaks for this family," she said.

At least 28 children left inside vehicles have died this year in the U.S., including six this month, according to a website that tracks such cases, kidsandcars.org. In June, a 6-month-old baby died after being left for hours in a hot car in Alabama, CBS affiliate WIAT reported. Two people were subsequently arrested and charged with manslaughter.

"I believe everyone I saw on the scene has children, so it's extremely difficult to be involved in something like that," Oneonta Police Chief Charles Clifton told reporters during a briefing.

Mike Bettes, a meteorologist for The Weather Channel, told "CBS Evening News" anchor and managing editor Norah O'Donnell that if it's 100 degrees outside, the temperature inside a car would be 119 degrees after just 10 minutes. After half an hour, the temperature inside the vehicle would be 134 degrees, which is "unsurvivable for a small child strapped inside a car seat."

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