The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Father, seven children die after power shutoff

Generator use suspected in carbon monoxide poisoning.

- By Juliet Linderman

PRINCESS ANNE, MD. —A divorced father and the seven children he was trying to raise on a kitchen worker’s salary died in their sleep of carbon monoxide poisoning days after the power company cut off electricit­y to the rental home after finding a stolen meter, police said Tuesday.

Delmarva Power said it did not cut off the family’s electricit­y because they were behind on their bills, but for safety reasons after discoverin­g the illegal connection on March 25.

Rodney Todd, 36, then bought a gas-powered generator and installed it in his kitchen to keep his two sons and five daughters warm. Friends and relatives last saw them alive on March 28.

“The children were all in beds and it appears as though they were sleeping,” Princess Anne town Police Chief Scott Keller said. “Probably it was bedtime and they decided they needed some light and probably some heat, because toward the end of March even though it was spring we were having some pretty chilly nights.”

Police found the bodies Monday inside the one-story wood-frame home on Maryland’s Eastern Shore after school workers, friends and Todd’s co-workers knocked on the door with no answer.

“I’m just numb. Like it’s a nightmare but it’s not,” the children’s mother, Tyisha Luneice Chambers, said Tuesday. “If I had known he was without electricit­y, I would have helped.”

Why Todd had a generator running indoors wasn’t clear. Keller speculated that had it been outside, the noise would have bothered neighbors.

Delmarva Power’s statement didn’t say whether Todd had made any arrangemen­ts to restore electricit­y after the illegal meter was removed.

State Sen. James Mathias Jr., a Democrat who represents Princess Anne, asked his fellow lawmakers Tuesday to work with agencies and neighborho­od groups to make certain the eight deaths were not in vain.

While Todd got some welfare money, it wasn’t enough to pay the bills, said his close friend Sarah Hardy.

“How can a man survive off of basically minimum wage with seven kids, and you can’t help him with a utility bill?” Hardy asked. “This man was working. And Delmarva Power cuts the lights off?”

The utility said Tuesday that the rental home never had legal power while the Todds lived there. It said the electricit­y had been disconnect­ed in October, and there was no request to reconnect it after the family moved there in November.

“Delmarva Power discovered a stolen electric meter was being used at the home on March 25, 2015. Delmarva Power disconnect­ed the illegally connected meter for safety reasons,” it said.

 ?? JOE LAMBERTI /AP ?? Mourners gather outside the home where a father and his children were found dead. The utility company said it cut off the electricit­y for safety reasons after discoverin­g and removing a stolen meter at the rented house.
JOE LAMBERTI /AP Mourners gather outside the home where a father and his children were found dead. The utility company said it cut off the electricit­y for safety reasons after discoverin­g and removing a stolen meter at the rented house.
 ?? Source: AP ?? TNS
Source: AP TNS

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