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Advocacy Group Pushes for Legislation After Tot Boy Dies at Daycare, Left on Floor for Hours – Crime Online

A nonprofit advocacy group is pushing for legislation that would mandate cameras in all public daycare centers in Missouri, following the death of an autistic child.

The Uvalde Foundation for Kids said it to apply the proposal to licensed daycare facilities across the state. Known as Conrad’s Law, the legislation is in connection with the death of 3-year-old Conrad Ashcraft at Poppy’s Playhouse 2 daycare in Park Hills.

As CrimeOnline previously reported, parent Tara Williams filed a wrongful death lawsuit against the daycare on behalf of her son, alleging that the day care knowingly approved of a technique used by an employee that led to the child’s death.

The lawsuit, filed Monday in St. Francois County, stated that the incident occurred on May 16 at the daycare located in the 100 block of Mitchell Street.

Williams reportedly claimed that her son sustained “a fatal injury” due to the defendant’s negligence, and that the employee used their legs to apply pressure to Conrad’s chest or abdomen, in an attempt to get the child to sleep. Court documents indicated that Conrad had been wrapped in an 18-pound blanket and left in a hallway.

“The safety and welfare of children placed in these facilities need to be the priority. Their livelihood usurps privacy issues, which themselves can be addressed effectively within this legislation,” Daniel Chapin, the founder of Uvalde Foundation for Kids, stated, according to FOX 2.

Conrad’s Law is seeking to mandate training for staff members caring for neurodivergent and special needs children.

Meanwhile, police have not filed any charges related to Conrad’s death.

Lacey Hardie, the boy’s aunt, told KSDK that Conrad was nonverbal and autistic, and didn’t know how to verbally ask for help.

Hardie added that children at the daycare typically began nap time around 12:30 p.m. She said Conrad’s mother arrived hours later at 4:15 p.m., and found him unresponsive on the floor. He was still lying where the employee had allegedly forced him to sleep.

According to The Kansas City Star, the daycare has not publicly responded to the allegations. The St. Francois County Sheriff’s Office, along with the Missouri Department of Elementary and Secondary Education’s Office of Childhood, is currently investigating.

On Tuesday, DESE sent a letter to the daycare’s owner, Spring Gray, saying it had pulled the facility’s daycare license.

“On May 20, 2025, DESE notified Poppy’s Playhouse, LLC (d/b/a Poppy’s Playhouse 2) that DESE’s Office of Childhood was immediately suspending its license to operate its child care facility at 6 Mitchell Street in Park Hills after the tragic death of a 3-year-old child on May 16, 2025. That immediate suspension letter is attached. Poppy’s Playhouse, LLC (d/b/a Poppy’s Playhouse 2) has 10 days to appeal the immediate suspension. If an appeal is made, DESE has 10 days to hold a hearing.”

On Wednesday, St. Francois County Sheriff Jeff Crites said in a statement detectives are currently working on the case.

“The St. Francois County Sheriff’s Office remains committed to conducting a thorough and complete investigation, with the goal of providing answers to the child’s family and community. At this time the investigation remains active and further details will be released as they become available.”

Anyone with additional information about the case should contact the sheriff’s office.

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[Feature Photo via Coplin Funeral Home]

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