A second child with autism drowned in a Cincinnati pond in under a year. Now parents want answers
Parents are looking for answers after a second child with autism drowned in a Cincinnati pond in less than a year.
Six-year-old Joshua Al-Lateef drowned in a pond at his familyโs West Chester apartment complex in November. Months later, seven-year-old MarโDasia Forte drowned in a pond at her familyโs West Chester apartment complex on June 13.
The moms of both autistic children and the local advocacy group EmPath For Autism want their local lawmakers to do something about the drownings.
Governor Mike DeWine told The Enquirer the state government โshould lookโ at requiring fences around retention ponds. But MarโDasiaโs mom, Mika Forte, told the publication, โI need more than looking.โ
โWe can’t keep losing children like this,โ she said.
The Enquirer reported, citing the National Autism Association, that a record number of at least 77 children with autism drowned last year. So far, at least 32 have drowned this year, according to the organization.
MarโDasia was a โvery happy, active, rambunctious little lady,โ her mom said.
She had wandered away from home in the past, so Forte installed special locks on the door and got her daughter a bed she couldnโt climb out of, but the little girl still managed to get out of the apartment.
“This should’ve stopped after the first [death],โ Forte said, adding, “We have to do better.”
Jonisa Cook, Joshuaโs mother, told The Enquirer she โcried and criedโ after hearing about MarโDasiaโs drowning.
Cook said Joshua was โlovable and his smile was everything,โ in a previous interview with The Enquirer.
Joshua had also wandered away from his home and drowned. He was found one day after he was reported missing, with hundreds of community members volunteering to search for him.
After MarโDasiaโs death, Cook said sheโs feeling more determined than ever to advocate for fences around retention ponds as well as an alert system for missing children with autism.
