A Georgia dad charged
with killing his toddler son by leaving the boy in a hot car all day
could face the death penalty, a judge said today at a court hearing.
Justin
Ross Harris, 33, was denied bond and faces child cruelty and felony murder
charges after he said he forgot his 22-month old son in his SUV while he was at
work at Home Depot.
A detective said Harris spent part of the day while his son
was dying in the overheated car sending explicit messages and photos to
“multiple women.” One of the females Harris sexted was 17, the detective said.
The prosecutor said that he brought up the sexting during the probable cause
hearing because it “goes to the state of mind” of the defendant. “He wanted to
live a child free life,” the prosecutor said. At the end of the three hour
hearing Judge Frank R. Cox denied bond for Harris because “this is a possible
death penalty case.” Cobb County Police Department Detective Phil Stoddard told
the court that before little Cooper Harris died, his father took him to a
Chik-fil-A restaurant for breakfast and while buckling the boy back into his
car seat, “Cooper gives him a kiss and he [Harris] gave him a kiss back.”
Harris sat impassively in an orange jail jumpsuit until the end of the hearing
when he began to cry. He has insisted he forgot his son was in the car and that
the boy’s death was an accident. Stoddard testified that before the boy died,
Harris had visited the website Reddit to search for articles on life without
children, and viewed videos on Reddit that showed people dying — by suicide or
execution, in some cases.
Harris had also twice viewed a video that shows the
painful death of animals left in hot cars, and had searched for how to survive
in prison, according to searches of his laptop, Stoddard said. The detective
said both Harris and his wife, Leanna Harris, seemed unemotional after learning
of their son’s death.
Harris never called 911 after finding the boy
unresponsive in his SUV on June 18, Stoddard said. The detective told the court
that Cooper suffered a “painful death.” He said the temperature that day was
around 88 degrees. But Harris told his wife the boy “looked peaceful … his eyes
and his mouth were closed,” Stoddard recalled of the pair meeting at the police
station.
The detective added under questioning, however, that photos taken by
police show that the boy’s eyes and mouth were not closed. At one point, Harris
told his wife: “I dreaded how he would look,” according to Stoddard’s
testimony.
And Leanna Harris asked her husband, “Did you say too much?” during
police questioning, Stoddard said. The detective also raised some points about
the wife’s behavior in his testimony.
He said that employees at the day care
center said that when she went to pick up her son and was told her husband hadn't drop off Cooper that morning, she said moments later, “Ross must have
left him in the car.”
The officer also said that he clearly heard a phone call
between Leanna Harris and her mother in which Cooper’s grandmother was
distraught over the news of the boy’s death and asked her daughter, “Why aren’t
you crying?” Leanna Harris replied, “I must be in shock,” Stoddard said. There
were also marks on Cooper’s face and abrasions on the back of his head, the
officer said.
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