Monday, August 12, 2024 - The father who left his young daughter to die in a baking hot car in Arizona, USA while he played video games became defensive and said “So I’m being treated like a murderer?” when police confronted him, newly released body-cam footage shows.
Christopher Scholtes, 37, also broke down when police
responded to his home on July 9 and found his two-year-old daughter Parker
clinging to life in the family car, where he claimed to have left her with the
air conditioner on for just a half hour because he didn’t want to wake her.
“So I’m being treated like a murderer?” he told police after
they told him the home may be a crime scene, raising his voice in the bodycam
footage obtained by Inside Edition.
When police first arrived at the home and were trying to save Parker, Scholtes appeared distressed as he held his head in his hands and paced about the home, the video shows.
“Please baby, please,” he
pleaded at one point, later saying “I can’t believe this” with a cracking voice
as he spoke on the phone.
“She’s very hot right now.
We’re going to do everything we can,” police told the father, who hid his face
behind his hands.
Parker was discovered in critical condition when her mother
an anesthesiologist came home around 4 p.m. and discovered her in the car with
the AC off.
In the footage, Scholtes tells police he only left Parker
outside for “no more than 30, 45 minutes” and that he checked on her throughout
but court documents later revealed he allegedly left her in the baking car for
over three hours while he was inside, and that he had a habit of leaving his
three daughters in the car.
“I told you to stop leaving
them in the car,” his wife, Erike Scholtes texted him after the tragedy. “How
many times have I told you?”
Their two other children even told police their father regularly left them outside in the car, according to a criminal complaint, which added that he “got distracted playing his game and putting his food away” while his daughter was outside dying.
A 16-year-old daughter from a previous marriage told KVOA-TV
Scholtes frequently left her alone inside cars without food for hours at a time
to the point that Child Protective Services took her away from him.
Scholtes pleaded not guilty to first-degree murder charges
on Thursday and remains free.
His wife previously asked a judge to release him to come
home to his family so they could “start the grieving process” together.
“This was a big mistake
doesn’t represent him,” she said.
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