A tragic incident has left a mother and her child dead after inhaling odorless carbon monoxide inside their car.
The mother and her one year old son lost their lives as carbon monoxide filled their vehicle
Inside a snow and iced packed car in Passaic, New Jersey a mother, Sashalynn Rosa, and her one-year-old, Messiah took their last breaths as carbon monoxide filled their vehicle.
"It's hard to lose them like that," says boy's grandfather, Felix Bonilla.
His son, Felix Bonilla, Jr. had been digging out the family's car Saturday night while his girlfriend and their two children sat inside to stay warm. With the car's engine on, and its tail pipe clogged by snow, the odorless, invisible gas seeped into the car in minutes, killing the mother and her baby boy. The little girl also unconscious, was kept alive by paramedics and a bystander who was not afraid to get involved.
"I tried to help the girl, and I put my mouth in. Girls and paramedics worked so hard, so hard to save the kid," said eyewitness Isabel Carmona.
Now, the little girl, Saniyah is in very critical condition at a hospital in Paterson. Her grandfather is hanging on to a thread of hope she may survive.
"The doctors say they don't think she's going to make it. Doctor says she has a slight chance to make it," says Bonilla.
Friends say the father, when not working at his job at a restaurant depot, spent all his time with his children. Eyewitness News told he's been by his surviving child's bedside ever since the tragedy. His father says his son is devastated.
"And my son. He's not doing good. Real bad," adds Bonilla.
The mother and child are the only deaths in New Jersey attributed to the storm. Carbon monoxide is a silent killer that strikes quickly and with little warning. Police say the tragedy is a reminder to people to make sure their tailpipes are free and clear because it doesn't take long for cars to fill up with carbon monoxide.
"Any snow that covers your tailpipe you want to shovel the snow from the back of the car and clear the tailpipe before you even start the car," said Battalion Chief Chris DiBella, Passaic Police Department.
Source: WABC-TV