Letchard was pictured leaving her Somerset home two days after her youngest daughter, who has not yet been named, died. The toddler was found in the back seat of the family’s gray Honda Civic at 2pm by Megan Kingston, a neighbor who also works as a volunteer firefighter with the Middle Bush Fire Department. Kingston pulled the girl from the vehicle and tried to revive her while waiting for EMTs. She could not be revived and was later pronounced dead at the hospital. It remains unclear how it was forgotten. Police believe the child may have been in the car for up to seven hours while the temperature reached 80 degrees.
LeChard said nothing as she returned home today accompanied by another, unidentified woman. LeChard, a native of Puerto Rico, works as a translator for Bloomberg.
Beatriz Viera LeChard, a 38-year-old translator and mother of two, leaves her home on Thursday, two days after the death of her two-year-old daughter. The child was left in the back seat of an inflatable car for seven hours. Neighbors found her and called 911 The mother is shown leaving her home on Thursday morning accompanied by a friend The distraught mother is shown being comforted by a police officer outside her home in Somerset, New Jersey. The toddler was in the vehicle for seven hours The child is believed to have been trapped in his car seat for up to seven hours on Tuesday as temperatures soared Viera LeChard is a Puerto Rican native who works as a translator for Bloomberg. She has not been charged, but the Somerset County Prosecutor’s Office is investigating her daughter’s death Neighbors on the quiet tree-lined street said they were devastated by the child’s death. “They are nice people. It’s such a tragedy,” one, who did not want to be named, told DailyMail.com. “How can this happen? How do you forget? I guess we’re all forgetful, I’ve forgotten things in the car. But how do you forget the little kid, you know? I don’t know,” said neighbor Alex Krstavski. They were just screaming in pain and agony. He collapsed on the ground and went to comfort her,” another neighbor told NBC New York. “They are wonderful parents. I have seen them love and cherish their daughters very much.’ Treana Huntley, who lived across the street from them, told The Franklin Reporter that the sound of the parents crying was devastating. “It was terrifying, it almost made me want to burst into tears. As a mother, just hearing this pain from another mother, it was very painful to hear. I wouldn’t wish that on anyone.” He said the death affected the entire neighborhood. That whole block was very emotional,” he said. Property records show the home last sold in 2013 for $230,000. The scene in Somerset, New Jersey, on Tuesday, where a toddler died after being left behind in a car for seven hours The gray Honda Civic in which the child died is seen parked in the driveway of the home The car is seen driving away from the house The parents were informed by the police, who knocked on their door, about their daughter’s death The child is the 22nd to die this year in the U.S. from being left in a hot car, four of which happened in one week in August, according to kidsandcars.com. Treana Huntley, who lived across the street from the family, said the parents’ screams were devastating Filmmaker Amber Rollins is working with families who have lost children in tragic accidents to make technology that could prevent more deaths a must in all new vehicles. Kids and Car Safety, along with parents, have written to Pete Buttigieg, secretary of the Department for Transport, urging him to go ahead with the provision passed in the infrastructure bill last year. “Every parent has made mistakes, no matter what it looks like. “Unfortunately, some of the mistakes end in tragedy and none of us expect that,” Elizabeth Crapo, whose 20-month-old daughter Mara died after being left in a car, told the organization. “And suddenly, you’re part of this club that no one wants to be a part of.” “I failed in my job as a protector. I failed my child,” said Marah’s father, Austin Crapo.
“I promise you no one could make me feel worse.”


title: “Pictured New Jersey Mother Of Toddler Who Died In Hot Car Klmat” ShowToc: true date: “2022-12-15” author: “John Kuhn”


Letchard was pictured leaving her Somerset home two days after her youngest daughter, who has not yet been named, died. The toddler was found in the back seat of the family’s gray Honda Civic at 2pm by Megan Kingston, a neighbor who also works as a volunteer firefighter with the Middle Bush Fire Department. Kingston pulled the girl from the vehicle and tried to revive her while waiting for EMTs. She could not be revived and was later pronounced dead at the hospital. It remains unclear how it was forgotten. Police believe the child may have been in the car for up to seven hours while the temperature reached 80 degrees.
LeChard said nothing as she returned home today accompanied by another, unidentified woman. LeChard, a native of Puerto Rico, works as a translator for Bloomberg.
Beatriz Viera LeChard, a 38-year-old translator and mother of two, leaves her home on Thursday, two days after the death of her two-year-old daughter. The child was left in the back seat of an inflatable car for seven hours. Neighbors found her and called 911 The mother is shown leaving her home on Thursday morning accompanied by a friend The distraught mother is shown being comforted by a police officer outside her home in Somerset, New Jersey. The toddler was in the vehicle for seven hours The child is believed to have been trapped in his car seat for up to seven hours on Tuesday as temperatures soared Viera LeChard is a Puerto Rican native who works as a translator for Bloomberg. She has not been charged, but the Somerset County Prosecutor’s Office is investigating her daughter’s death Neighbors on the quiet tree-lined street said they were devastated by the child’s death. “They are nice people. It’s such a tragedy,” one, who did not want to be named, told DailyMail.com. “How can this happen? How do you forget? I guess we’re all forgetful, I’ve forgotten things in the car. But how do you forget the little kid, you know? I don’t know,” said neighbor Alex Krstavski. They were just screaming in pain and agony. He collapsed on the ground and went to comfort her,” another neighbor told NBC New York. “They are wonderful parents. I have seen them love and cherish their daughters very much.’ Treana Huntley, who lived across the street from them, told The Franklin Reporter that the sound of the parents crying was devastating. “It was terrifying, it almost made me want to burst into tears. As a mother, just hearing this pain from another mother, it was very painful to hear. I wouldn’t wish that on anyone.” He said the death affected the entire neighborhood. That whole block was very emotional,” he said. Property records show the home last sold in 2013 for $230,000. The scene in Somerset, New Jersey, on Tuesday, where a toddler died after being left behind in a car for seven hours The gray Honda Civic in which the child died is seen parked in the driveway of the home The car is seen driving away from the house The parents were informed by the police, who knocked on their door, about their daughter’s death The child is the 22nd to die this year in the U.S. from being left in a hot car, four of which happened in one week in August, according to kidsandcars.com. Treana Huntley, who lived across the street from the family, said the parents’ screams were devastating Filmmaker Amber Rollins is working with families who have lost children in tragic accidents to make technology that could prevent more deaths a must in all new vehicles. Kids and Car Safety, along with parents, have written to Pete Buttigieg, secretary of the Department for Transport, urging him to go ahead with the provision passed in the infrastructure bill last year. “Every parent has made mistakes, no matter what it looks like. “Unfortunately, some of the mistakes end in tragedy and none of us expect that,” Elizabeth Crapo, whose 20-month-old daughter Mara died after being left in a car, told the organization. “And suddenly, you’re part of this club that no one wants to be a part of.” “I failed in my job as a protector. I failed my child,” said Marah’s father, Austin Crapo.
“I promise you no one could make me feel worse.”