Mom Left Her Baby Alone In Her Bed Room, Then She Heard Her Husband’s Screams

<p>On February 28&comma; 2016&comma; Carrie and Larry Vollmer from Fort Worth&comma; Texas&comma; put their 17-month-old daughter to bed like it was any other night&period; She&rsquo&semi;d cried a little bit&comma; but as usual&comma; after a couple of minutes&comma; she was asleep&period; Unfortunately for this happy family&comma; however&comma; they were about to discover something terrible the next morning that would change their lives forever&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>The married couple had set up a happy home with their two children&comma; Jackson&comma; 3&comma; and Sammy&comma; 17 months&period; With everything in place&comma; the four of them were leading an idyllic life&period; Carrie would likely never have believed that something so awful was lying in store for them&period; If you have not done so already&comma; please subscribe to our channel and click that notification bell to get inspired by these real-life stories every day&period; Now back to the story&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>It was Larry&comma; Sammy&rsquo&semi;s father&comma; who made the hellish discovery on the fateful day&period; Larry had to endure something that no parent should ever have to&period; He walked in to find his princess&rsquo&semi;s lifeless body in her crib&period; « The desperation and screeching panic in my husband&rsquo&semi;s voice the next morning as he went to retrieve her from upstairs is something I&rsquo&semi;ll never forget&comma; » Carrie subsequently wrote on Facebook in April 2016&period; In the family home&comma; Sammy&rsquo&semi;s bedroom was on the second floor&comma; while her mother and father slept in the master bedroom downstairs&period; Sammy&rsquo&semi;s big brother&comma; Jackson&comma; had been having difficulty sleeping&comma; so he joined them downstairs in their bedroom&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>The next morning&comma; Larry climbed the stairs to fetch his daughter&comma; but he quickly realized that something was wrong when he felt the heat&period; « As soon as I got to the top of the stairs&comma; it was very warm&comma; I mean hot&comma; » Larry told WFAA&period; But tragically&comma; it was too late for Sammy&period; « I ran to her room&comma; opened her door&comma; and found her passed away&comma; » Larry explained&period; The temperature on the two floors of the house had been controlled by different systems&period; When the family went to bed that night&comma; the thermostat for the second floor was set at 72 degrees Fahrenheit&period; However&comma; a malfunction in the coming hours would change the family&rsquo&semi;s lives forever&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>By the following morning&comma; the system&rsquo&semi;s error had allowed temperatures to skyrocket&comma; leaving fragile Sammy to sleep in a bedroom that heated to well above 100 degrees Fahrenheit&period; « The temperature registered 99 degrees on our thermostat&comma; which was as high as it could go&comma; meaning it was over a hundred degrees&comma; » Carrie wrote&period; And despite attempts to resuscitate her&comma; within less than an hour of Larry discovering her tiny body&comma; Sammy was pronounced dead&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>The Tarrant County medical examiner subsequently recorded the cause of death as hyperthermia from an elevated body temperature&period; The bereaved parents&comma; meanwhile&comma; were left wondering why they never heard Sammy cry&period; After doctors explained that Sammy had passed away in her sleep&comma; the couple knew that their baby would not have been able to make a sound before her body failed&period; Further harrowing news came when doctors warned that&comma; due to his age&comma; had Jackson been in his usual bedroom that night&comma; he could have died too&period; « Young children cannot regulate their own body temperature and don&rsquo&semi;t sweat as much as adults&comma; which makes them more susceptible to overheating&comma; » Dr&period; Todd Wolf&comma; a pediatric emergency physician from Fort Worth&comma; told a Star-Telegram&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>Searching for an answer&comma; Carrie replayed the events of the night before&period; She&rsquo&semi;d let Sammy say goodnight to her dad and then taken her up to the bedroom&period; After cradling Sammy in her sleep sack&comma; Carrie had placed her daughter into the crib for what would be the last time&period; This sack was just one of the many ways in which Carrie had endeavored to keep her baby safe&period; In addition to keeping stuffed animals and pillows out of the crib&comma; Carrie had also ensured that her babies had breathing monitors up until the age of 1&period; As a self-confessed warrior&comma; Carrie really thought that she&rsquo&semi;d eliminated as many risks as possible&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>Sadly&comma; though&comma; there was one risk that nobody had predicted&period; Upon preparing to become a mother&comma; I read multiple books and stories on possible dangers that could harm babies and toddlers&comma; » Carrie wrote&period; « I wish I&rsquo&semi;d read once about this one warning somewhere about heating systems&period; » Could have ensured that Carrie had kept the breathing monitor or invested in a thermometer&comma; then perhaps everything could have been different&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>Once they received the devastating news that Sammy&rsquo&semi;s death had been caused by a heating system malfunction&comma; the Vollmers found a lawyer and began looking into legal action against the heater&rsquo&semi;s manufacturer&period; The family needed explanations&semi; their baby had died a similar death to those left for too long in hot cars but had done so in the safety of her bedroom&period; And Carrie felt like she had to take action&period; Not long after the incident&comma; Carrie began spending her evenings researching similar events online&comma; and that was when she decided to set up a Facebook page in memory of her daughter&comma; called « Remembering Sammy Joyce Vollmer&period; » Over the past year&comma; the family has posted memorable stories&comma; photos&comma; and videos of their princess as they remember her&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>Moreover&comma; this Facebook page had an even more important purpose&period; Carrie&rsquo&semi;s aim is to spread Sammy&rsquo&semi;s story in the hope that this heartbreaking series of events never happens to anybody else&period; The pinned message on Sammy&rsquo&semi;s Facebook page ends with a plea to share the post&period; « We want others&comma; especially those with two-story homes&comma; to hear Sammy&rsquo&semi;s story so the children can be protected and other families are spared from the horrific grief we are forced to endure each day&period; » With more than 21&comma;000 shares&comma; Carrie&rsquo&semi;s initial Facebook post has since gone viral&period; People have reached out to her family expressing love and support&comma; as well as sharing their own stories&period; It has also become clear that Sammy&rsquo&semi;s page could potentially save lives too&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>Some of the nightmarish incidents that readers have shared with Carrie seem as distressing as her own story&period; On top of numerous close shaves&comma; Carrie has heard about children turning blue and having to be thrown in the bathtub&comma; as well as parents who have walked into bedrooms that are 90 degrees Fahrenheit&period; One thing&rsquo&semi;s for sure&comma; Carrie&rsquo&semi;s experience was not unique&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>Devastatingly&comma; though&comma; nothing will bring Sammy back&comma; and for this devastated family&comma; the nightmare will go on&period; « We missed her every second of the day&comma; » Carrie told WFAA&period; « There&rsquo&semi;s a very large hole in our family without her here&period; » The door to Sammy&rsquo&semi;s bedroom is now always open&semi; its white wooden crib still stands with plush toys filling the room&period; « I can&rsquo&semi;t stand to see the door closed&comma; » Carrie explained to the Star-Telegram&period; « I don&rsquo&semi;t want to ever feel like we&rsquo&semi;ve forgotten about her&period; » If you like the video&comma; please give it a thumbs up and consider sharing it with someone who may find it interesting&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;

Quitter la version mobile