Anonymous wrote:People, please read this article and understand that this is a longstanding problem which numerous recalls have failed to fully resolve. Lane made 12 million heirloom quality cedar chests with automatic locks from 1912 until they discontinued them and the vast majority are likely still in circulation, being handed down from generation to generation.
https://www.dispatch.com/story/news/2014/02/04/reynoldsburg-couple-mourning-daughter-warn/24204981007/
It’s really sad that nobody at Lane in the early 20th century could imagine such an automatic latching system being a death sentence for children. Definitely an argument for more women in the workplace.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Mom's story about how they ended up in the chest which somehow closed while they were sleeping doesn't make any sense to me.
+1
I feel like the dad was watching them and they were wound up and wanted them to sleep so pop them Advil/Benadryl or something like that. They had a bad reaction and it was too late when he found them.
This is the dumbest theory yet.
DP
Not dumb at all.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I remember arguing with my mom over a toy chest and we wound up not buying because she was adamant on danger. Today there was a story on two four year old twins who got up and took their stuffed animals out of toy box and got in and died after falling asleep in it and parents had no idea because it was in their room and found out next day. I thought of my mom and how I told her she was nuts that I would
have things in the chest so not a problem with safety. Please people she was right-don’t have a chest with a lid.
Come on! The very first place anyone would have looked would have been a chest! Not buying this story
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I remember arguing with my mom over a toy chest and we wound up not buying because she was adamant on danger. Today there was a story on two four year old twins who got up and took their stuffed animals out of toy box and got in and died after falling asleep in it and parents had no idea because it was in their room and found out next day. I thought of my mom and how I told her she was nuts that I would
have things in the chest so not a problem with safety. Please people she was right-don’t have a chest with a lid.
Come on! The very first place anyone would have looked would have been a chest! Not buying this story
Same.
Here are some red flags that stood out to me, and I’m no investigator—
1–moms fb post is so detailed. Why?? She telling too much. I have no doubt she is grieving the loss but it feels different.
2-mom literally crafted every piece of the narrative about how they must have been playing in the middle of night as they often do, pulled most of the toys out of the chest and climbed in together and told each other goodnight (she included that detail as though she were imagining what they would have said to each other), fell asleep, and somehow the lid closed but they were asleep so there was no screaming or crying out for help
3–they looked ALL OVER for them, but in mom’s retelling she said they had removed most of the toys from the chest so wouldn’t you immediately notice that hep of toys upon entering their room? Why wouldn’t you look there first?
And finally….
4. Very important detail in the news story is that the police were called to the home around noon. What?!?! How many 4-year-olds do you know of are unaccounted for between 8am and 10am in a given day? And we’re not even talking 10am…we’re taking NOON.
What the what?!? Are you telling me that it’s normal for the four year old twins to “sleep in” and not be seen or heard from in that house until after 11 or 11:30 in the morning before someone says “gee…where are the twins?”
Something isn’t right.
Anonymous wrote:Gotta wonder if the older kids put the younger kids in there and this was their way to take blame off them. Just spitballing here.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I remember arguing with my mom over a toy chest and we wound up not buying because she was adamant on danger. Today there was a story on two four year old twins who got up and took their stuffed animals out of toy box and got in and died after falling asleep in it and parents had no idea because it was in their room and found out next day. I thought of my mom and how I told her she was nuts that I would
have things in the chest so not a problem with safety. Please people she was right-don’t have a chest with a lid.
Come on! The very first place anyone would have looked would have been a chest! Not buying this story
Anonymous wrote:This story is fishy.
First, that FB post is bananas, reads like a classic liar narrative where the liar embellishes with insane details.
And the story is that the dad and older kids got up on a Friday morning and went outside to play? And the dad never checked on the preschoolers? Who were known to get up and play during the night?
WTF? My kids are teenagers and when I get up before them, I peep into their rooms before heading downstairs. But, with preschoolers, who doesn’t check them?
Also—it was a Friday, the older kids were back in school—so why were they playing outside instead of getting ready and going to school? If the late shift working mom was a late riser, certainly the older kids would have been well into their morning routine, if not already at school.
And who wakes up with their kids and immediately runs outside, no one was eating?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Do you really not know when you're running out of oxygen if you're asleep? It's not the kind of thing where your body would wake you up bc something is wrong?
This story is freaking me out on multiple levels.
No, you can just die without ever waking up. That's why carbon monoxide poisoning is so dangerous. A person who is sleeping is unlikely to have their body register any of the symptoms and they just die without ever waking up.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Mom's story about how they ended up in the chest which somehow closed while they were sleeping doesn't make any sense to me.
+1
I feel like the dad was watching them and they were wound up and wanted them to sleep so pop them Advil/Benadryl or something like that. They had a bad reaction and it was too late when he found them.
This is the dumbest theory yet.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Mom's story about how they ended up in the chest which somehow closed while they were sleeping doesn't make any sense to me.
+1
I feel like the dad was watching them and they were wound up and wanted them to sleep so pop them Advil/Benadryl or something like that. They had a bad reaction and it was too late when he found them.
Anonymous wrote:It seems so weird to me because I have heard of children getting caught like by their neck when heavy lids on toy boxes close, But I've never heard of a kid's suffocating in a wooden box.