Prosecutor Urges Jessica Tata to Return to U.S. and Face Day Care Fire Charges
Jessica Tata to be hit with more charges in fatal day care fire.
March 1, 2011 — -- A Houston prosecutor denied today that it botched the investigation into a day care fire that killed four toddlers, but conceded the woman charged in the fire had left the country and urged her return to the U.S. and face charges.
"If you cared at all about those children, then return," Harris County District Attorney Patricia Lykos said in an appeal to Jessica Tata.
Tata, who ran Jackie's Child Care in Houston, was charged Monday with one count of reckless bodily injury to a child and bond was set at $500,000. But prosecutors realized that Tata, who is 22, had already fled to Nigeria.
Lykos said at a news conference today that nine additional charges will be filed against Tata including six more charges of reckless bodily injury to a child and three charges of child endangerment.
The DA also issued an alert that Tata's brother, Ron Tata, was attempting to create a business called "Houston Benefit of Daycare Victims" to solicit money.
"I would urge the Tata family instead of... raising money and who knows where that money is going to and how it's going to be accounted for, that they have Miss Tata return to Harris County and face justice," Lykos said.
The prosecutor called Ron Tata's fund raising plans "reprehensible."
Lykos news conference was held amid criticism that investigators had not acted more quickly after last Thursday's fire and allowed Tata to leave the country.
Tiffany Dickerson is furious that prosecutors never questioned or arrested Tata who ran the day care where seven children were left alone and four-- including Dickerson's young son -- died in a fire that started on the woman's stove.
"I don't understand how that could possibly happen. You see the damage to the house. You see the kids? Four passed away. How could you not just interview her and hear her side of the story at least. I'm at a loss for words, I don't understand," Dickerson said.
Lykos defended her team's investigation into the case. It took four days to charge Tata and prosecutors never questioned the Texas born woman.
"Suggestions that anyone in the District Attorney's office had reasonably delayed the filing of criminal charges against Ms. Tata or that she could have been arrested or held in custody during the pendency of this investigation. These allegations are outrageous," Lykos said.
3-year-old Shomari Dickerson
An affidavit released today showed that Tata was shopping at Target at the time the fire started.
"If she had to go to the store, why wouldn't she take them. She had a big van for all the kids to go," Dickerson said. "It's so much to give your trust to someone with a baby you've carried for nine months."
The 22-year-old mom was working as a technician at West Houston Medical Center last Thursday when two of the seven children injured in the fire came to the hospital.
Dickerson didn't know that the children were from the day care she used until she got a phone call from her 5-year-old daughter's school asking why no one had picked up the little girl after class.
Dickerson called "Jackie's Child Care," the day care run out of Tata's home.
"A man's voice answered and said, 'I'm so sorry. There's been a fire and all the children have been rushed to the hospital.' I just dropped to the floor," she said.
Dickerson rode by ambulance to another hospital to find her daughter, Makayla.
"She was sedated, but she squeezed my finger," Dickerson said.
She still didn't know where 3-year-old Shomari was. When she'd taken him to the day care that morning, he was wearing blue jeans, a blue and white flannel shirt and Jordan sneakers. Now, her little boy was unrecognizable from the burns.
"The whole ER -- all the doctors, all the nurses, three chaplains -- they closed the door and my heart just stopped. They said all the children have been claimed but one and we're 90 percent sure he's your son and we're so sorry he didn't make it," Dickerson said. "I told everyone you might as well kill me too. I'm not going to make it."