A residential area in Phoenix, Arizona, USA.



[Baby, how are you?]



I smashed a car window, but the locked door won't open.



The dispatched police carefully climb through the broken window.



In the back seat, a 2-year-old boy, exhausted from the heat, was crying.



A mother came home after shopping at the grocery store and was trying to get her baby and luggage out, but the car door was locked for a moment.



[Can you give me your arm? give me your arm Baby, you're really good.]



[Melhouse/Phoenix Police: It was a very helpless feeling. I could imagine the feelings of the baby's mother. It was terrible for both the mother and the baby.] The



police carefully remove the baby from the car seat and hand it over to the parents.



[I was happy to be dispatched to the scene and help.]



[Coddington/Phoenix Police: After taking out the baby, it was really good to see them playing with Lego. It was good to see such a conclusion.]



Two days before this incident, Phoenix police rescued two children trapped in a car.



It happened when my parents left their car keys in the car and got out.



Across the United States this year, seven people died from heat stroke after parents left their children in their cars.



Police urged never leave a child alone in a car, even for a brief moment.



[There is no moment short enough to leave a child in the car. You shouldn't be left alone for even a few minutes in this heat.]