Police probe ‘horrific’ death of teenage boy trapped in van

“This is not a joke”

By DAN SEWELL, Associated Press

CINCINNATI (AP) — Authorities pledged on Thursday to find out what went wrong in the death of a 16-year-old boy they say became trapped by a minivan bench seat in a school parking lot and whose body was found about six hours after he first called 911.

Police Chief Eliot Isaac said something went “terribly wrong” in Kyle Plush’s death. He said a dispatcher was put on administrative leave and the actions of all personnel involved will be reviewed.

Cincinnati Police Chief Eliot Isaac speaks to reporters about the death of Kyle Plush Thursday, April 12, 2018, during a news conference at the Criminal Investigation Section conference room, in Cincinnati. He showed a stock image of a 2002 Honda Odyssey, which was the same make, model and year of Plush’s vehicle. Authorities pledged Thursday to find out what went wrong in the death of the teenage boy they say became trapped by a minivan bench seat in a school parking lot. His body was found more than six hours after he called 911. (Meg Vogel /The Cincinnati Enquirer via AP)
Cincinnati Police Chief Eliot Isaac speaks to reporters about the death of Kyle Plush Thursday, April 12, 2018, during a news conference at the Criminal Investigation Section conference room, in Cincinnati. Authorities pledged Thursday to find out what went wrong in the death of the teenage boy they say became trapped by a minivan bench seat in a school parking lot. His body was found more than six hours after he called 911. (Meg Vogel /The Cincinnati Enquirer via AP)

Hamilton County prosecutor Joe Deters said his office is trying to identify experts to help its own probe with the coroner’s office. The coroner ruled the teenager died of asphyxia, from his chest being compressed.

A telephone message was left for the boy’s parents on Thursday.

Isaac called the boy’s death “a horrific tragedy.”

“We share in their heartbreak,” he said.

Plush first called 911 at about 3:15 p.m. Tuesday, saying he was stuck inside a van in “desperate need of help.” But he was unable to hear the dispatcher’s questions, police said, and a callback to his cellphone after it disconnected went to voicemail. Responding police drove through the area looking for signs of anyone in distress but saw nothing out of the ordinary in the school complex, which has several parking areas.

A county sheriff’s deputy on traffic duty at the school also checked around, police said.

Plush called 911 again at around 3:35 p.m. Police said this time he provided a description of the vehicle as he desperately pleaded for help but couldn’t hear the dispatcher. Isaac said the information didn’t get relayed to officers at the scene.

“This is not a joke,” the teen said over 911. “I’m almost dead.”

He asked the dispatcher to “tell my mom I love her if I die.”

In this Tuesday night, April 10, 2018 photo, Cincinnati police investigate the scene where a boy was found dead in a minivan in the parking lot near the Seven Hills School campus in Cincinnati. Cincinnati authorities are investigating the death Tuesday of 16-year-old Kyle Plush, who was trapped inside the minivan. The Hamilton County coroner says Plush died of asphyxia due to “chest compression” and that it appears to be an accident. (Cara Owsley/The Cincinnati Enquirer via AP)

Police were unable to locate the boy on any of several parking lots of the Seven Hills School complex.

Police said a friend called the boy’s parents that evening saying he hadn’t shown up as planned for a tennis match. His mother used an app to locate his phone at Seven Hills. They called the county dispatch center, and police said family members then arrived at the unlocked vehicle with the unresponsive teen inside. Police and fire responders getting there just before 9 p.m. were unable to revive him.

The Seven Hills School , a private academy in Cincinnati for students from pre-kindergarten through 12th grade, sent out a message saying Plush had been a student there since sixth grade.

“He was a young man of keen intelligence, good humor and great courage, and this whole community feels this loss very deeply,” the school said.

Classmate Preston Luniewski told WLWT-TV that Plush “was truly a spectacular person.”

“He just lit up the classroom,” Luniewski said.

Cincinnati Police Chief Eliot Isaac speaks to reporters about the death of Kyle Plush Thursday, April 12, 2018, during a news conference at the Criminal Investigation Section conference room, in Cincinnati. He showed a map of the Seven Hills School campus on Red Bank Road with a star indicating where Plush’s 2002 Honda Odyssey was found. Authorities pledged Thursday to find out what went wrong in the death of the teenage boy they say became trapped by a minivan bench seat in a school parking lot. His body was found more than six hours after he called 911. (Meg Vogel /The Cincinnati Enquirer via AP)

Authorities indicated Plush was in the rear of the minivan when he became trapped by a seat.

A Honda spokesman identified the vehicle as a 2004 Honda Odyssey and said there had been no seat-related recalls for that model.

“Our hearts go out to the victim’s family during this difficult time,” spokesman Chris Martin said. “Honda does not have any specific information from which to definitively determine what occurred in this incident.”

Isaac said police will study possible police equipment malfunctions.

Mayor John Cranley, a Democrat, urged prayers for the Plush family, saying, “our hearts are heavy.”

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