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Police: Baby dies after being left in day care van for hours; co-owner arrested

Hours after 4-month-old girl's death, DCF suspends day care's license

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JACKSONVILLE, Fla. – After a 4-month-old baby was found unconscious Wednesday afternoon in a van at a Westside day care died, the co-owner of the center was arrested, the Jacksonville Sheriff's Office said. The baby girl later died.

Darryl Ewing, 56, was booked into the Duval County jail at 8:18 p.m. on a charge of child neglect, according to online jail records. 

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Police said the girl was found in a child safety seat inside the van at Ewing's Love and Hope Preschool on Lenox Avenue about 1 p.m, nearly five hours after the vehicle used to pick up children was parked out front.

Jacksonville firefighters tried to revive the baby and took her to Wolfson Children's Hospital, but the child could not be saved, WJXT-TV reported.

"Tragically, today a family has just been notified of the gut-wrenching loss of their precious baby girl," Department of Children and Families Secretary Chad Poppell said. "DCF immediately opened a joint child death and child care licensing investigation in coordination with law enforcement. We will continue to support this family as they mourn the loss of their baby girl."

Police said the center cares for about 14 children and no other children were injured.

Investigators said they learned Darryl Ewing was the driver of the day care van that picked up the infant and other children earlier Wednesday morning and no other employees were on the van. According to detectives, the van arrived at the day care about 8:25 a.m., and children were offloaded and taken into the center. Investigators said Darryl Ewing then parked the van in front of the day care and left the vehicle unattended with the 4-month-old still strapped in her car seat in the third row of the van.

At 1:03 p.m., according to the Sheriff's Office, the infant's mother called to make after-school arrangements for all of her children and it was discovered the baby had never been checked into the day care. Police said day care employees went to the van and discovered the infant still strapped in her child seat, unresponsive, and called emergency services.

Throughout the afternoon, the building was surrounded by police tape, officers, evidence technicians and homicide detectives, including the JSO chief of investigations.

According to the Sheriff's Office, further investigation revealed the Darryl Ewing was responsible for maintaining a separate driver’s log documenting all children that are placed onto the van, which was separate from the parental log signed by parents. Detectives viewed the driver’s log, which they said showed Darryl Ewing had logged in two of the infant's siblings, but not the infant.

Police said they learned, based on interviews with other day care center employees, that it is the van driver’s responsibility to check and make sure children are offloaded from the van at the day care center.

"It was determined the suspect’s actions (and lack thereof) failed to provide the victim with the necessary supervision and provide services to protect the victim’s physical health, all which was essential to the victim’s well-being and contributed to the death of the victim," the Sheriff's Office said in a news release.

According to the Sheriff's Office, Darryl Ewing refused to talk with detectives when he was taken to the police station to be interviewed and that's when he was arrested. Police identified him as the co-owner of the day care center, though the day care's website lists Darryl Ewing as the director.

Duval County jail records show he has been arrested at least four previous times.

The state said will be immediately suspending the day care center's license suspension because it wasn't aware children were being transported.

While the center has a valid license with DCF since 2016 and inspectors have not found any Class I violations in its quarterly inspections, the agency said it didn't know the day care center was transporting children, so it never monitored transportation standards.

The state said parents have already been contacted to let them know the center's license is being pulled.

The other owner of the business, Gloryian Ewing was arrested 18 months ago on two counts of child abuse. While those charges involved her own teenage children -- police said they were beaten with an extension cord -- she was arrested at the day care center in December 2017. 

After Gloryian Ewing, 51, (shown in 2017 Jacksonville Sheriff's Office booking photo) completed a pretrial intervention, the charges were dropped. 

DCF records show the center's license was not affected by the owner's legal troubles. The center had no violations in its last three quarterly inspections by the DCF -- most recently on April 15

The last time inspectors found any issues at the facility was last July when the report noted a lack of documentation of worker training and outdoor equipment, and field trip forms were not available for review. Since the center has been open, the facility has received two Class II and 13 Class II violations.

News4Jax meteorologists estimated that the temperature inside an enclosed vehicle parked in the sun at midday Wednesday could have reached 123 degrees.

A woman who lives in the neighborhood didn't want to give her name but said her children used to attend this day care center and her heart breaks for the baby’s family. 

"Luckily they were grade-school age, but they were left on that same day care van," the woman told News4Jax. "It's sad. I just wish that day care was shut down. It really, it's not the best day care."

Another woman who works at a different child care center calls it a tragedy.

"It’s just heartbreaking right now to know that a child has lost its life," Lisa Brown said. "Just coming to day care and being taken care of and not returning home. I think about my own grandkids."

The Sheriff's Office and DCF continue to investigate the infant's death.

 

 


About the Authors
Corley Peel headshot

Corley Peel is a Texas native and Texas Tech graduate who covered big stories in Joplin, Missouri, Tulsa, Oklahoma and Jacksonville, Florida before returning to the Lone Star State. When not reporting, Corley enjoys hot yoga, Tech Football, and finding the best tacos in town.

Erik Avanier headshot

Award-winning broadcast and multimedia journalist with 20 years experience.

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