Texas Rangers

Toddler Burned in Family Oven Recovering, Mother Arrested: Sheriff

Child to be placed into foster care after being released from Parkland

New details are emerging about a North Texas mother accused of placing her 2-year-old daughter in the family's oven.

According to a statement released by Somervell County Sheriff Greg Doyle, deputies responded around 11:45 p.m. Thursday to a home in Glen Rose after receiving the report of a child who had been burned.

Witnesses explained to deputies that a woman, later identified as 34-year-old Tasha Shontelle Hatcher, told them she had put her baby in the oven, Doyle said.

The child was taken to a hospital in Fort Worth before being transported by air ambulance to the Parkland Memorial Hospital Burn Center in Dallas. Texas Child Protective Services spokeswoman Marissa Gonzales said the child has been taken into their custody and will be placed in foster care when released from the hospital.

Hatcher was arrested and charged with injury to a child with serious bodily injury, a first-degree felony. She was arraigned Saturday with a bond set at $300,000. Information on an attorney for Hatcher was not immediately available.

Cristal Martinez, who worked with Hatcher at a local restaurant, said Hatcher was always a loving mother and churchgoing woman. Martinez said she's not sure what could have driven the mother to commit that crime. 

"I believe that something has taken her to that place, whether it was some type of drug, something has taken her there," said Hatcher.

Court records show Tasha Hatcher, of Glen Rose, has a history of drug problems and run-ins with police. She was last arrested in Dallas in 2008 for drug possession and driving with a suspended license.  

Online, family members of the little girl say the child suffered burns to 60 percent of her body. They are asking for prayers and donations to help with hospital costs.

The case remains under investigation by the Somervell County Sheriff's Office, the Texas Rangers and Child Protective Services.

A judge is scheduled to hear the case in the coming weeks and decide if the toddler will be returned to relatives or stay in foster care.

Somervell County is located about 74 miles southwest of Dallas.

Copyright AP - Associated Press
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