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Ga. father indicted on murder charges in son’s hot car death

Posted at 10:34 AM, Sep 04, 2014
and last updated 2014-09-04 11:59:35-04

ATLANTA — A Georgia grand jury on Thursday indicted Justin Ross Harris on eight counts, including malice murder and two counts of felony murder, in the hot car death of his toddler son.

The other five charges are: first-degree cruelty to children, second-degree cruelty to children, criminal attempt to commit a felony (sexual exploitation of a minor) and two counts of dissemination of harmful material to minors.

Harris pleaded not guilty to murder and child cruelty charges in mid-June. Cobb County Chief Magistrate Frank Cox signed off on the charges, stating Harris would’ve had to notice that “the stench in the car was overwhelming” when he got in it as he left work and “drove it for some instance” before stopping to check on the boy.

Charges filed in an indictment supersede the previous charges. Harris has been held without bond since 22-month-old Cooper’s death this summer.

Charges have been downgraded in this case before. Less than a week after his arrest, a judge changed the child-cruelty charge from first- to second-degree, a move that CNN legal analyst Mark Geragos said suggests “prosecutors don’t believe they’ve got the evidence to say this is intended or premeditated.”

Authorities have painted Harris as a terrible father who, after admittedly looking up how hot a car needed to be to kill a child, purposely strapped his son into his sweltering SUV to die.

His motivation? The prosecutor has characterized Harris as an unfaithful husband who wanted a childless life.

Yet his attorney, H. Maddox Kilgore, has argued his client tragically forgot his child in the car. Friends described Harris as a doting dad, not a malicious one, who loved to show off his blond, bright-eyed boy and talked about him incessantly.

It all started simply enough: Justin Ross Harris left home with Cooper in a rear-facing car seat in the back of his 2011 Hyundai Tucson, then headed to his job as a Web developer for Atlanta-based Home Depot after making a quick pit stop at a fast-food restaurant for breakfast.

But he didn’t follow through on his routine of stopping to drop the boy off at daycare.

Cooper Harris

READ MORE: Toxicology report negative in toddler’s hot car death

Yet his attorney, H. Maddox Kilgore, has argued his client tragically forgot his child in the car. Friends described Harris as a doting dad, not a malicious one, who loved to show off his blond, bright-eyed boy and talked about him incessantly.

Instead, according to a criminal warrant, Harris drove to work and left Cooper strapped in his car. He went back to his SUV during a lunch, put something in the car, then returned to work.

All the while, the vehicle got hotter and hotter, with records showing the temperature topped 92 that day.

Sometime around 4:15 p.m., seven hours after he’d arrived at work, Harris got back into his Hyundai and left work. Witnesses told police that, soon thereafter, they heard “squealing tires (as) the vehicle came to a stop” in a shopping center.

Cobb County Police Detective Phil Stoddard testified at the probable cause hearing that Harris got out of the car yelling, “Oh my God, what have I done?”

He then stood with a blank look, going to the other side of his SUV to make a phone call after someone told him that his son needed CPR, a witness told police, according to Stoddard.

Witness Leonard Madden testified that, upon leaving a restaurant, he noticed Harris was distraught and crying.

“He was hollering,” Madden testified, recounting the father saying, “Oh, my God! Oh, my God! My son is dead!”

Harris had to be physically restrained once it became clear Cooper wouldn’t make it — at which time it was 88 degrees — according to police.

Leaving his son alone in the car wasn’t the only thing Harris did that day, authorities say.

While at work, he messaged six women besides his wife and exchanged explicit texts with some of them — including a photo of an erect penis that he sent to an underage female — Stoddard testified.

Yet even after these allegations surfaced, his wife Leanna Harris stood by her man.

She sat calmly through the probable cause hearing, and at Cooper’s funeral flatly insisted she was “absolutely not” angry with her husband.

“Ross is and was and will be, if we have more children, a wonderful father,” Leanna Harris said at the funeral in Tuscaloosa, Alabama, a gathering that her husband also addressed via phone from the Cobb County Jail. “Ross is a wonderful daddy and leader for our household. Cooper meant the world to him.”