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12-Year-Old Boy Saves Toddler Locked In Hot Car In Tulsa; Mother Issued $250 Ticket

TULSA, Okla. (KFOR) – A toddler is safe after being locked in a hot car in Tulsa on Tuesday thanks to the quick actions of a 12-year-old boy. Ben Theriot and hi...
Ben Theriot

TULSA, Okla. (KFOR) – A toddler is safe after being locked in a hot car in Tulsa on Tuesday thanks to the quick actions of a 12-year-old boy.

Ben Theriot and his mom, Nikki Fields, were about to shop for shoes when they heard a baby screaming and yelling.

“My mom heard a baby crying,” said Theriot.

Fields found the 2-year-old boy locked in the backseat of a vehicle.

Tulsa police told FOX 23 the heat index on Tuesday was 116 degrees.

“I just got on the phone, I yelled for him to find anything in my car,” Fields said.

Theriot found a ratchet strap in his mom’s car and got to work.

“I started hitting the side window, didn’t bust, bent it pretty badly,” said Theriot.

That’s when he moved to the front windshield and an employee from a store brought out a part of a clothing rack.

“I swung it over my shoulder, hit it right in the center. And then I hit it a couple more times and then I climbed on the windshield,” recalled Theriot. “I stomped on it and then it cracked pretty badly again. Then, the lady went and grabbed that hanger thing and then I put the hook into the windshield and pulled it out. And then I unlocked it.”

Police say the toddler was red-faced and upset, but did not have to go to a hospital.

Authorities found the mother shopping in ROSS and issued her a $250 ticket.

She reportedly told police it was all an accident, saying she thought another adult was in the car when she went inside. Officers asked her why the car would be off and locked if someone else was in the vehicle.

FOX 23 reports police are still unsure what happened.

Tulsa police say the mother received the ticket under the “Forget Me Not” law and did not arrest her because the child was not seriously hurt, adding it would not make a strong enough case for child neglect.

Police say they are making sure DHS conducts a follow-up investigation to ensure the child’s welfare.

Fields says she’s just proud of her son’s hard work.

“I’m just very proud of him. I’m glad he knew what to do,” said Fields.

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