Baby Curren’s story is a devastating cautionary tale.
When golden-haired, two-year-old Curren Collas died in an accident in his own bedroom, it turned his family’s world upside down.
It also prompted them to issue a safety warning to other parents across the globe — a call now backed by Swedish furniture giant IKEA.
Curren, from in West Chester, Pennsylvania, was crushed to death in his own bedroom after a popular piece of furniture toppled onto him on 25 February 2013 and pinned him to a bed.
Now his mother Jackie Collas has written of the tragedy, describing the heart-stopping moment she walked into her son’s room to discover he had been killed by the six-drawer MALM dresser.
Ms Collas wrote on her Facebook page:
“I saw that his body was trapped underneath the dresser. At that point I started screaming. His head was trapped between the edge of the bed and all of the weight of the dresser was laying across his neck.
I tried ripping the dresser off of him. It took me a couple of tries to pick it up. I wedged my body between the dresser and Curren so I could scoop him up. I tried to pick him up like I normally do, but his little body and neck was so floppy…
His face was completely purple from broken blood vessels, but he was still warm. I placed him on the bed and tried to feel for a heart beat. At the time I was still screaming and uncontrollably shaking… I’m not sure why they say check for a heartbeat.
I was shaking so bad I would of never found one. I picked him up in my arms and rushed downstairs. I immediately called 911 and began CPR.”
Cullen is not the only child to have died as a result of similar IKEA products. Last year, a 23-month-old child from Washington died after he became trapped beneath a three-drawer MALM chest — and the Daily Mail reports that in the US, IKEA and the consumer panel have received 14 reports of tipover accidents involving MALM chests.
Since the death of their son, Curren’s distraught parents have campaigned tirelessly to raise awareness for furniture safety.
“I wanted to share this because I want you to learn from my mistakes. Bolt EVERYTHING down. Dressers, book shelves, TVs, anything that could possibly fall,” the parents warned others on their Facebook page In Memory of Cullen Collas.
Top Comments
About 5 years ago a Malm 4 dresser drawer almost fell on my then 1 year oldson. We hadn't fixed it to the wall & he opened every drawer and it started to fall ont to him. I caught it with a second to spare. I always think of what could have happened if I had got there a second later...it was so heavy I could barely hold it up. It isn't like other chests of drawers as it is very low to the ground and doesn't have a proper base support due to its light weight. After that we fixed it properly to the wall but it was a close close call! :(
This is a very sad story but it has also made me think.
What is the situation for people that rent? I am sure that it would be part of a standard rental agreement that you can be making holes in the walls to affix furniture without permission. Or is there something I am missing?
That's a really good point Bronwyn. As far as I know you can (as a renter in Victoria) add wall hangings and brackets as long as nothing is structurally damaged. It is also in your rental agreement though to be extra sure you might need to negotiate that as we did so it was written into the rental agreement.
I'll leave it to the experts like the Tenants Union to explain the details - you do raise a fair point though.