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Inset left to right: Ariel Osbey and Imani Osbey (Alcovy Judicial Circuit District Attorney”s Office). Background: The stretch of highway where Imani was found suffering from a fatal case of hyperthermia in Newton County, Ga. in October 2023 (Google Maps).
A Georgia mother has been sentenced to a lengthy prison term following the tragic death of her 1-year-old daughter, who succumbed to the heat after being left in a hot car, prosecutors have revealed.
Recently, 31-year-old Ariel Osbey admitted guilt to charges of second-degree murder and providing a false statement related to the death of her 13-month-old daughter, Imani Osbey. This information comes from a press release by the Alcovy Judicial Circuit District Attorney’s Office.
As a result, Osbey has been sentenced to 20 years in a Georgia state prison, followed by a 15-year probation period. Upon her release, she will face restrictions, including a ban on unsupervised interactions with anyone under 16, and will be required to undergo mental health treatment.
The heartbreaking incident occurred on October 10, 2023, when Imani was left in a rear-facing car seat for approximately five hours in extreme heat. During this time, Osbey was inside a home in Newton County, where she was providing cleaning services, according to the district attorney’s office.
After completing her work, Osbey returned to her vehicle and drove away from the neighborhood. It was only after a short distance that she realized something was seriously wrong with her daughter, prompting her to call 911, prosecutors stated.
Deputies responded to the situation, meeting Osbey at the intersection of Georgia State Route 162 and Rocky Plains Road in Newton County, as reported by Atlanta-based NBC affiliate WXIA.
But first, the defendant tried subterfuge, law enforcement said.
“When deputies arrived she told them that her daughter had been sick and that she was traveling on Highway 162 when she noticed that Imani was not making any sounds or breathing,” the district attorney’s office wrote in the press release. “Imani was transported to Piedmont Newton where her internal temperature was noted to be 107 degrees. Imani was soon pronounced dead from hyperthermia.”
Aside from Imani’s body temperature, other pieces of evidence began to point away from the illness narrative supplied by the mother.
Deputies at the scene of the crime noticed the inside of the car appeared to be “extremely hot” and that hot air was blowing through the vents, prosecutors said. And, perhaps tellingly, on the floorboard, investigators found Imani’s zip-up hoodie – damp to the touch.
At the hospital, the false narrative is said to have continued. Osbey told Newton County Sheriff’s Office investigators that her daughter had gone into the house with her while she was cleaning — but that lie was easily disproved by surveillance footage, according to law enforcement. Prosecutors used the footage for the timeline of her fatal neglect as well.
“The same camera, which, like most surveillance cameras, is motion activated, did not show the Defendant coming out of the house to check on Imani at all,” the press release continues.
On Dec. 1, 2023, Osbey was indicted on the same counts she eventually pleaded guilty to. During her plea hearing, the defendant entered a non-negotiated guilty plea — meaning the state and defense offered their own suggestions to the court for the proper course of punishment.
The defense, for its part, requested a sentence wholly comprised of 10 years on probation — which the judge handily rejected.
“Any death of a child is heartbreaking,” Alcovy Judicial Circuit District Attorney Randy McGinley said in a statement. “Imani’s death was not only preventable, but also criminal. The Defendant chose to leave her 13-month-old child in a hot car for hours. Sadly, a short internet search will show that this still occurs far too often. I hope this case will serve as a reminder to anyone reading this to never let this happen.”