hot car

Cary Mom Jailed For Murder After Leaving Her 2 Toddlers In Hot Car To Gamble At Casino

CARY, NC – A Cary mom who left her two young daughters inside a sweltering hot car while she gambled inside a casino has now been jailed for their murders.

hot car
Battle

Launice Battle, 31, from Wake County, North Carolina, pleaded guilty to one count of second-degree murder in the deaths of Trinity Milbourne, two, and her sister Amora, three.

On Thursday (July 25), she was sentenced to serve between just under eight and not more than ten and a half years in a state correctional facility.

Back on 27 August 2022, Battle drove to the casino Vegas Style Sweepstakes in Raleigh and left her children in the car while she went inside.

The vehicle was parked only partially in the shade while outside temperatures soared to 95F.

The children were left there for around six hours, from 2.30 pm until she finally returned at 8.30 pm that evening, according to an autopsy report first obtained by WNCN.

Upon her return, she found the two toddlers unresponsive in the hot car and drove them to Duke Raleigh Emergency Department in Wake Forest.

Vegas Style Sweepstakes in Raleigh

They were pronounced dead that evening, with an autopsy ruling hyperthermia as the cause. Battle was arrested for murder.

A medical report stated that the girls had “no body temperature” when they were discovered, and their remains were in stages of “mild [body] decomposition.”

Battle’s grandmother, Dr Ruth Allen, said the family hadn’t heard from her in two weeks prior to the murders.

Then, on the night of the children’s death, Battle’s boyfriend called looking for her.

“He was asking us where she was, have we seen her? Was she here?,” Dr Allen told CBS 17 following her 2022 arrest.

“I told her, no, we haven’t seen her. He said, ‘I don’t know. Something ain’t right.’”

She said that Amora had been under her care for two of her three years after “social services gave her to me.”

Battle had been investigated by Child Protective Services three times before the children’s deaths, the most recent instance taking place less than two months before the toddlers died, records show.

But Battle’s cousin Keisha Harris claimed that her actions were just a “careless mistake” and that she was a “caring and loving mother.”

“She’s a caring and loving mother to her kids at the end of the day,” she told WRAL. She’s not a cold-blooded murderer. She’s not a killer.”

Battle was initially charged with two counts of felony murder and faced over 80 years in prison.

But, she later agreed to plead guilty to reduced charges.

The judge ruled that her willingness to “accept responsibility” for her actions justified “a mitigated sentence,” and court records show that she was credited with 667 days of time served.

This article first appeared on CBS17.

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