A Car Hit and Killed Their 7-Year-Old Son. Now They're Being Charged for Letting Him Walk to the Store.
Letting children walk alone isn’t a crime. But in North Carolina, prosecutors are treating it like one.

A mom and dad are grieving in Gastonia, North Carolina. Their 7-year-old son, Legend, was tragically killed by a car after running into the street on a walk to the store with his 10-year-old brother.
If you were tasked with determining a punishment for the parents, would you: A) arrest them for manslaughter, set bail at $1.5 million, and forbid them from attending their son's funeral, or B) decide this tragedy has been punishment enough?
Authorities in Gastonia chose option A.
Jessica Ivey and Samuele Jenkins are facing felony charges of involuntary manslaughter and child neglect, as well as a misdemeanor child neglect charge, according to The NC Beat.
The tragedy occurred on May 27. Ivey claimed it was the first time she allowed the kids to walk to the store. A witness to the accident said the older boy tried to grab his little brother from running, but he broke away.
The Gastonia Police Department issued a statement on its Facebook page, saying that while it extended its "deepest sympathies" to the parents for their "heartbreaking loss," the investigation revealed that the children were unsupervised during their walk.
As if that's a smoking gun. As if no kids have ever walked unsupervised to the store. As if every parent who lets their kids run an errand is guilty of a crime.
"In such cases, adults must be held accountable for their responsibilities to ensure a safe environment for their children," the department declared.
They must be held accountable for an unpredictable tragedy? Parents aren't prosecuted when their child chokes on dinner or slips in the bathtub—because accidents happen, even in the safest homes. How can parents ever guarantee a perfectly "safe environment"?
Do they think the parents haven't learned a lesson from this heartbreak? Who is served by this arrest? Has the Gastonia Police Department considered the impact on the surviving brother who will now believe "that his failure to save his brother resulted in sending his parents to prison?" asks David Pimentel, a law professor at the University of Idaho. "Does anyone believe that child will be better off in foster care while his parents rot in jail?"
The parents were arrested because our country has come to believe that any child who is unsupervised anywhere for almost any amount of time is automatically in danger, and therefore, that any parent who trusts their kids to do anything on their own doesn't care if they live or die.
This delusion—that any parent who doesn't hover doesn't care if their child is safe—is what allows the authorities to act as if Legend's parents deliberately did something so evil it warrants felony charges.
But in fact, it was a normal, rational, and common thing the parents did. "Ten-year-olds and 7-year-olds have been walking to and from school, unaccompanied by adults, for over 100 years," says Pimentel.
The implications of this prosecution "are very troubling for parents everywhere who can never provide a guarantee against their kids getting hit by a car, even if they were right there with them," notes Diane Redleaf, author of They Took the Kids Last Night and a legal consultant to Let Grow, the nonprofit I helm.
This isn't an isolated incident either. Across the country, parents are being criminalized for allowing their kids modest independence. These prosecutions reflect a growing distrust in parental judgment and an inflated sense of risk.
The sad truth is that often when something awful happens to a child, it's not the result of bad parenting. It's the result of bad luck. Blaming parents just means we have a scapegoat and can continue to believe that bad things only happen to the children of bad parents.
Turning tragedy into punishment doesn't make kids safer. It just makes all parents more afraid—and all families more vulnerable.
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Sorry, wrong again. Saw similar case when we lived in St Louis about 15 years ago, young unaccompanied boy walking to school on railroad tracks, KILLED BY A TRAIN
What are you saying is the wrong part? Kids shouldn’t be allowed to walk anywhere unaccompanied?
Back away. It’s pedantic quicksand.
Zeb, you seem to look for posts that don’t really interest you but that give you an opportunity to do that dumb outrage act
A young kid that walks to school on the railroad tracks leaves some adult to blame. YOU NEVER DO THAT and you don’t do it wearing a Walkman. This is news to you?????
How young? Completely unaccompanied, or with an older sibling?
G-o-o-g-l-e
Safetyism + Nanny State = you can’t ever do enough to keep any bad thing from happening, and if you do “let it happen” then there will be hell to pay, regardless.
This shit creeps, and there will be no end to it until enough of us take back control of our every day lives. Meanwhile bureaucrats, NGOs, and anyone with a yen for a cause will thrive on it.
Now tell me “I’m sorry you don’t care but…”
Now tell me “I’m sorry you don’t care but…”
Nope. This one of the legitimate good libertarian cases. The police write off traffic fatalities without charging anyone all the time. Accidents happen. Nobody asked them to come take care of these parents that are letting their kids play around with knives in the street or anything where the cop on the scene has to effectively flip a coin between two or more equally bad decisions or outcomes between two different parts of the public they’re supposed to serve. At best, someone in a position of authority got a wild hair and needs to be reminded to get their shit together.
I’m of the opinion that the excessive sensitivity and lack of ability to deal with life’s problems as adults seen in many Millennials and members of Gen Z have been contributed to by the excessive hovering and structure imposed by schools and parents when these individuals were growing up. I’m shocked when I hear parents talking about actively helping their 25 year old through buying a car or when I hear that almost the first person that kid calls, even though they live several states away, is their parents when they have car problems – esp. when the parents have no special expertise in either buying cars or fixing them (and this from someone who was 25 long before I had the benefit of the internet to easily research how to do such things).
Unfortunately such excessive and destructive parental hovering and imposed formalized structure is now so embedded in our society that it’s now effectively also embedded in law in some sense so parents dare not engage in truly responsible parenting (which, yes, sometimes means allowing children to be responsible for themselves) lest they find themselves in the situation that these parents now find themselves in.
Perhaps there is specific evidence of a pattern of neglect in this case or that one or both children were intellectually substantially “below grade level” so reasonably should not have been trusted. I will therefore maintain something of an open mind in this particular case. (Although the cynic in me also wonders, this being the North Carolina, if the fact the mother is white and the father is black increased the chances of charges being brought.)
The DA for Gaston County is Travis Page. He could drop the charges.
https://www.ncdistrictattorney.org/district-attorney/prosecutorial-district-38/
Like almost all elected officials in the county, he is a Republican. He is up for re election in 2026.
Ah. He is a Republican. Of course he will drop the charges because Republicans think is ok to murder children.
Yup, Tony can get even more retarded.
A few years ago, a child in my neighborhood was hit by a car. The child ran between two cars chasing his ball into the street, so there was no way the car driver could have had enough time to avoid the child.
In this case, the cops and prosecutor decided that the CAR DRIVER was at fault. The parents piled on with a law suit.
My thought was, where were this kid’s parents and why don’t they bear some culpability for leaving their idiot child unattended?
I walked to and from kindergarten by myself when I was five. So did most of the other kids. I move out of my Mom’s house when I was 14.
And ????? IF you had been killed it would be much harder to post your meaningless posts
7 and 10 is pretty young, Lenore. And I’m tired of this argument:
“Ten-year-olds and 7-year-olds have been walking to and from school, unaccompanied by adults, for over 100 years,” says Pimentel.
We don’t live 100 years ago. We live in 2025. West Hudson Blvd. is about a mile long stretch of 45mph four lane road with not much in the way of traffic control.
A hundred years ago when I was young and I walked to school, it wasn’t down a busy thoroughfare like that. It was zipping through the woods, waving to the old lady who smiled and waved every morning as we cut through her backyard (and who usually had fresh cookies for us on the return trip), crossing a small creek, knocking on the door of the friend whose yard we also cut through so he could join us, crossing the park, and then going through the chain link fence that made up the school boundary.
Even when I was older (12-14) and we were all riding our bikes down to the Pizza Hut to dump our quarters into arcade games or sneaking off the to the lake to go cliff jumping in our underwear or just roaming about to explore – we weren’t zipping across four-lane roads or pacing along the side of a busy highway.
It’s one thing to say, “Let your very young kids walk to the store.” It’s another thing to say, “Let your very young kids walk to the store down a busy state road with a posted speed limit of 45mph.”
Go look at the map. That’s literally the kind of place where I grew up. Lots of houses, a couple schools, residential roads, a park, some sports fields, a Little Caesar’s, a bowling alley – I could very easily see myself traversing those back roads and forests on my bike at a young age to get to school, or go play ball, or eat some unsanctioned pizza. But West Hudson Road is the ONE place on that square of map that any parent wouldn’t want their 7yr old.
Not sure if those kids went to the Food Lion, Bodega, or Dollar Store – but if she said “take West Hudson,” then that was some pretty dumb parenting. Especially when there are so much more adventurous routes (though, granted, I did live in an era where all the neighbors knew each other – and recognized the neighborhood children – and gave a wry smile to kids sprinting through their backyards as a shortcut from A to B).
This is ultimately what annoys me about Lenore (and, to some extent, my own mother). She doesn’t understand that 2025 is not 1955. Or even 1985. Or heck, even 2005. They were snail-paced compared to the breakneck speed we’re moving now. “We did it when I was a kid,” just doesn’t apply to the United States anymore. The generational differences are just far too different for Boomers to apply their worldview to Gen X to apply their worldview to Millennials to apply their worldview to Zoomers.
It’s like an interesting factoid that Humans today are closer in age to the Tyrannosaurus Rex, than the T-Rex is to the Stegosaurus.
Prayers for the boy who’s now with God, more to his brother who’s going to carry this trauma his whole life, and to the parents who have suffered the worst loss imaginable. As for the charges to the parents… well, take in everything I’ve said here and make your own call about whether that was good parenting or negligent parenting. In 2025.
The kid ran into the street. It happens all the time with parents present.
You’d blame the parents if the car jumped the curb and killed the kid on the sidewalk, because he was walking on West Hudson Blvd.
2025 is way fucking safer than 1955 or 1985. You are just fearful and need to control people who aren’t helicopter parents.
The kid ran into the street. It happens all the time with parents present.
Tell me you’re not a parent without telling me you’re not a parent.
When you’re walking with your child – or your wife, for that matter – down the street, to which side of you have you placed them and why?
2025 is way fucking safer than 1955 or 1985.
Pedos claiming a right to be in the wrong bathroom suggest otherwise. Illegals running rampant in our streets suggest otherwise.
Also, language.
“Tell me you’re not a parent without telling me you’re not a parent.”
I am a parent, and Idaho-Bob is right. It matters not on which side you have “placed” them: kids can yank their hands right out of yours and dash into harm’s way.
In my opinion, the chorus of “it’s the parents fault” comes from people who are trying to reassure themselves that tragedy will never strike THEIR family because THEY are GOOD parents. I wish that as a society, we had more compassion and less self-righteousness.
kids can yank their hands right out of yours and dash into harm’s way.
And it’s a lot more understandable if it happens when an adult was holding it, rather than a 10yr old given a responsibility he wasn’t up to that’s now going to haunt him for life.
From 1st grade on we walked to school, along with every other kid in the neighborhood. Even as 4-year olds we played unsupervised with other kids on our street. A 10-year old is in fourth grade, at which point we were riding bikes all over. We kept are eyes open for cars, learned how to cross the street, had the self-control not to dash into traffic, and didn’t talk to people we didn’t know.
Kids 7 and 10 are plenty old enough to walk in their own neighborhood.
I don’t think you actually read what I wrote at all.
What the heck is going on in North Carolina? Some of the most leftard stuff I see these days comes from there. Is it trying to become Minnesota with a Southern accent?
I’m guessing the southern accent is being replaced by some version of carpetbagger, selling their 3 million dollar 2 bed 1.5 bath apt in DC. and retiring on their juicey gov’t pension.
These days you’ll find more people with a North Carolina accent in Ohio than in North Carolina.
Give it time. They’re slowly sliding down that slope.
I am so glad my kids are grown. I almost want to counsel them to not reproduce. It is becoming toxic to be a parent.
I almost want to counsel them to not reproduce.
This is self-defeating, 4B Movement idiocy. Obviously, nobody should be forced to reproduce, but fewer people breeding only ups the stakes for control freaks and reduces the number of people who are capable of rightly assessing and asserting what does and does not constitute acceptable parenting risk.
As I said, almost. But I am, damned sure, glad that I reproduced and shepherded them into productive adulthood before this lunacy got this far. Otherwise I probably would have copped more than a few felony charges.
Would this still be a crime if the kid had broken away from his parents, run into the street and been killed?
Legend?
Damn right they need to be charged. Their kid is dead because they were lazy inattentive shits.
North Carolina is another state overrun by north east liberals.
Which explains a lot.
Then there’s Austin, Tx., Denver, Co. Minneapolis, Mn., Seattle, Wa., Portland, Or. San Francisco/Oakland, Ca.
Every single liberal run city is a nightmarish, hell hole but continue to elect liberals, you get what you voted for.
Seattle and Portland were ruined by Californicators.
Yeah, proggies who don’t believe in potty training kids can’t be expected to teach them how to cross the street.
Not to post another “when I was a kid…” but we did learn to stop and look both ways pretty early on.
Even my cat will look both ways before he crosses the street, so maybe this kid was intellectually challenged.
Don’t do that. That was a beautiful 7yr old boy we’re talking about, who (like his brother) didn’t have the maturity that comes with a full appreciation of the world around him – like most 7yr olds don’t. It’s a tragedy. Don’t belittle it by calling him stupid. That’s not cool.
We can MMQ his actions until we’re blue in the face, but at the end of the day he was a 7yr old doing what carefree innocent 7yr olds do. And what happened was absolutely tragic.
“Just letting him know that somebody was there and he wasn’t alone. Stay with us, sweetheart. You’re going to be alright. Stay with us,” Williams said.
Focus on that part, Nova.
I can pretty clearly remember my first time being sent on an errand to buy a pint of milk at the Quick Shop at five years old. I had to cross four lanes of a thoroughfare, looking both ways, and all the other survival stuff.
It would not surprise me to find out that my 17 year old brother was spotting me just in case, but I’d walked with him several times before. The cars were bigger and heavier in 1965, with not as much clarity in the site lines. The world was just as full of predators, they just didn’t get caught as much.
Later, we lived in a suburb where the cars barrelled down the main street. Most of survived and still look both ways.
The case is crazy.