Several seconds of silence overcame Janette Fennell when asked about the nation’s latest hot car death involving a child earlier this week.

A 2-year-old girl was found unresponsive after being left in a car for about 14 hours outside her parents’ home Tuesday in Prosperity, Florida, authorities said.

Deputies reportedly noticed that the girl was hot to the touch. Paramedics said the toddler’s temperature was 107 degrees. Her parents now face charges including child neglect and possessing methamphetamine and drug paraphernalia.

The tragedy was already the fourth hot car death in the U.S. this year.

“That’s four too many,” Fennell, the founder and president of Kids and Car Safety, an advocacy group told USA TODAY Friday. “We’re not even in peak season yet.”

With warm weather starting to heat up across the U.S., Kids and Safety has released three public service videos on what to do if you see a child alone in a vehicle, what happens when a child becomes trapped in a hot car and how not to leave kids in a hot car. Each video depicts scenarios of what could happen if proper precautions are not taken and tips on how to potentially prevent a hot car death.

“The biggest takeaway is to never leave your children alone in a vehicle,” Fennell said. “But we all know, it’s not that easy.”

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