
A ONE-year-old boy has died a horrific death after being left in a sweltering car while his mom went to a med spa.
His two-year-old brother, also left strapped in the backseat, survived the blazing heat.

One-year-old Amillio Gutierrez died after being left in a hot car[/caption]
His brother, 2, survived despite the car reaching 107 degrees in the two hours they were left alone[/caption]
The car had reportedly been left running with the air conditioning set to 60 degrees[/caption]
The incident happened on June 29 in Bakersfield, California, a city north of Los Angeles, as temperatures outside soared past 100 degrees.
Their mother, 20-year-old Maya Hernandez, allegedly left both toddlers locked inside her Toyota Corolla Hybrid.
She had gone to Always Beautiful Med Spa for a cosmetic procedure, according to local NBC news affiliate KGET, though the kind of procedure was not specified.
While the appointment only took 15 to 20 minutes, Hernandez had left the boys in the car alone for nearly two hours.
Court records say she never once checked on her children during her appointment.
When help was finally called, baby Amillio Gutierrez was having a seizure, foaming at the mouth and shaking.
Doctors recorded his body temperature at a deadly 107 degrees.
Despite 40 minutes of resuscitation efforts at the hospital, Amillio was pronounced dead at 5:48 pm.
His brother survived and had a body temperature of 99 degrees, police said.
A witness working next door said surveillance cameras caught frantic efforts to save the boys.
“They’re trying to put cold water right here on the reception, and it was something very sad that never had to happen,” the witness told KGET.
The Corolla had reportedly been left running with the air conditioning set to 60 degrees.
However, Toyota confirmed to police that the car automatically shuts off after one hour of inactivity.
The car was parked in direct sunlight during the hottest part of the day, with outside temperatures around 101 degrees.
Data collected from 1998 to 2024
Since 1998, NoHeatStroke.org has tracked child deaths in hot cars, offering one of the most comprehensive databases on the issue. Researchers say the site, along with the nonprofit Kids and Car Safety, fills a crucial gap due to the absence of standardized reporting nationwide. The observation was highlighted in a study published last year in the journal Traffic Injury Prevention.
- Almost three-fourths of children who died of vehicular heatstroke, also known as vehicular hyperthermia, were 2 years old or younger.
- Although 53% had been forgotten in parked automobiles, 24% got into a vehicle on their own.
- The 10 states where pediatric vehicular heatstroke was most common are Alabama, Arizona, California, Florida, Georgia, Louisiana, North Carolina, Tennessee, Texas and Virginia.
Inside, experts said it likely reached as high as 143 degrees.
Police said a spa worker had texted Hernandez earlier that morning, saying the kids could wait inside the lobby.
“Sure if you don’t mind them waiting in the waiting room hun,” the worker wrote, according to the police report.
Instead, both toddlers were found locked in their car seats hours later, unable to escape.
One customer grabbed Amillio drenched in sweat, and poured water on him inside the restroom.
“They were strapped in their car seats. They couldn’t even get up to save themselves,” the boys’ grandmother, Katie Martinez, told ABC local affiliate KERO-TV.
According to police, Hernandez admitted she had thought about how dangerous it was beforehand, but still left the kids in the vehicle.
She has been charged with involuntary manslaughter and child cruelty, and is being held on over $1 million bail.
Hernandez is due back in court for a pre-preliminary hearing on July 11.
Court records also revealed she had a previous run-in with Child Protective Services in March 2024 over emotional abuse, though it was deemed unfounded.
The children’s father, who is in jail for an unrelated incident, was notified of his son’s death by jail staff.
“I never thought anything like this could happen,” grandmother Martinez told CBS affiliate KBTX.
“What happened to them shouldn’t happen to any other kid.”

The car was parked in direct sunlight during the hottest part of the day[/caption]
Maya is now facing charges of involuntary manslaughter and child cruelty[/caption]
Grandmother Katie Martinez said the boys were trapped and couldn’t even save themselves[/caption]
If you or someone you know is affected by any of the issues raised in this story, call or text the Childhelp National Child Abuse Hotline at 800 422 4453 or live chat at https://www.childhelphotline.org/.
If a child or other person is in immediate danger, contact 911 immediately.