![]() ![]() He wanted the attention.įrankly, that’s a ludicrous scenario. His plan all along was to drive to Akers Mill shopping center, because he wanted lots of people around when he discovered Cooper. Why not “discover” Cooper right there in the Treehouse parking lot? What did he have to gain by driving over a mile before seeing his son in the back seat? Those were the questions the prosecution had to answer, and this was what they came up with: Ross never had any intention of going to the movies. You may wonder why Ross even got in the car if there was, in fact, an overwhelming stench. When police arrived at the scene last Wednesday, sources say the smell inside the car ‘reeked’ and ‘it smelled to high heaven of a dead body’… the fact that Harris ignored the smell for that long was ‘clue number one he wasn’t telling the truth.’ ” Days after his arrest, Fox News reported that “two Cobb County law enforcement sources, who asked not to be named, said authorities were immediately skeptical of Ross Harris’s claim that his son’s death in a hot car was a horrible accident. With the help of a bystander named Anthony Pantano, he pulled Cooper out of the vehicle and began CPR.Ĭooper had been dead for approximately 4-5 hours when Ross got him out of the car. Witnesses said his tires were screeching as he pulled into Akers Mill and stopped the car in the middle of the road by Maddio’s Pizza. Several minutes into the drive, Ross looked over his right shoulder to change lanes and caught a glimpse of Cooper. He and two friends, Winston Milling and Alex Hall, were planning to see a movie, 22 Jump Street, at the AMC theater near Akers Mill Square. ![]()
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