- Safiu Kehinde
A United States-based Nigerian woman, Gbemisola Akayinode, has been arrested and charged with felony murder after her 9-year-old daughter, Oluwasikemi, died in hot car.
The child reportedly died of hyperthermia after being left inside a car for eight hours in sweltering heat in Texas.
Akayinode’s arrest was confirmed in a post shared on X last week Friday by Harris County Sheriff, Ed Gonzalez.
According to the post, the Harris County Institute of Forensic Sciences ruled the child’s death a homicide.
“Arrest update: today, #HCSOTexas Homicide Detectives and our Violent Criminal Apprehension Team (VCAT) arrested Gbemisola G. Akayinode for the murder of her nine-year-old daughter, Oluwasikemi Akayinode. The Harris County Institute of Forensic Sciences ruled the death a Homicide, as a result of hyperthermia.
“Gbemisola (11-17-88) is being charged with Felony Murder and being booked in the Harris County Jail.” The post read.
Gonzalez had in an earlier report disclosed that detectives found the late girl inside the vehicle parked at an industrial complex on Mayo Shell Road in Galena Park, near Houston, Texas, on the 1st of July.
“The child was transported to LBJ hospital and pronounced deceased,” the report read.
ABC News, in a report on Monday, noted that court documents revealed that Oluwasikemi died on July 1 after being left in the vehicle for more than eight hours on a 99-degree day while her mother went to work at a manufacturing plant nearby.
It explained that Gbemisola reportedly arrived at work around 5:45 a.m., leaving her daughter in the car with food, a rechargeable fan, ice cubes, and water, and lowered the car’s back windows halfway and gave the child melatonin to help her sleep.
When she returned to the car around 1:53 p.m., after finishing her shift, the 36-year-old mother found her daughter unresponsive and blue, after which she screamed for help.
The documents were said to have further revealed that Gbemisola said she had taken Oluwasikemi to work with her several times previously, including the day before.
She said she brought her daughter with her because she didn’t have money for day care until her next paycheck, but investigators determined the foreman at her job was paying for day care for her, court documents said.
Further report by local outlet KHOU11 disclosed that the court documents revealed Gbemisola blamed the girl’s death on prescription medicine given for ADHD, but also admitted that she gave the victim melatonin that morning and the night before.
The Daily Mail added that Sheriff Ed revealed Akayinode had also left a shade up in the front window of the car, making it difficult for passersby to see inside.
CPR was reportedly started on Oluwasikemi, who was then taken to nearby Harris Health Lyndon B. Johnson Hospital, where she was pronounced dead, and the medical examiner’s office ruled her death a homicide as a result of hyperthermia.
