The mysterious death of Lindsay and Hailey Gardner in Fort Worth

Lindsay Gardner Fort Worth death

Lindsay Groce Gardner & Hailey Rain Gardner, Died January 13, 2015, Fort Worth, Texas.

Revised July 2024

At about 8.20 am on January 13, 2015, police were informed by a passer-by, Amber Bentley, that a Toyota sedan was wrecked against a tree in a field southwest of the intersection of Dirks Road and Bryant Irvin Road, Tarrant County, near Fort Worth in Texas.

Amber happened to be passing as she dropped her kids at school. Since she had a child in the car then, she couldn't get out to approach the car but stayed until the police showed up. 'There's always deer in that field. I was looking for the deer and I saw the car … It was against a tree and the hood was smashed in and the driver's side door was open."

The car's airbags were deployed, but with no sign of an occupant, the police left the scene near a grove of trees off Altamesa Boulevard.

What followed was seriously bizarre.

Lindsay Gardner car crash

Discovery of bodies

About 11 am, a fence repairman came to the site of the crash near Altamesa Boulevard and, unlike the police, discovered two dead bodies. A woman's body was on top of the baby still strapped into the car seat.  Both were undressed, women's clothes were strewn in the field between the car and the bodies, indicating she undressed as she walked with her baby away from the car, which was around 200 yards away.

Natosha Tucker of the Fort Worth police "I cannot comment on why there was a delay between the call that was made and the bodies being found".

The two bodies were identified as Lindsay Groce Gardner, 27, and her 13-month-old baby daughter, Hailey by the Tarrant County medical examiner's office. There were no injuries and no sign of trauma on both bodies, apart from a few minor scratches.

Lindsay was a teacher of one-year-olds at Travis Avenue Baptist Church’s Christian Early Learning Centre, married to Anthony (on June 29, 2012), and worked as a freelance artist. 

Autopsy results

The medical examiner’s ruling in Lindsay's death states she died of hypothermia with paradoxical undressing. Toxicology screenings came back negative for both mother and child.

Paradoxical undressing can occur in cases of severe hypothermia when the victim, confused and disoriented, begins to feel as if she is burning up and, therefore, removes her clothing. Hypothermia occurs when the body temperature drops below 95 degrees, which can lead to heart and respiratory failure and eventually death.

Lindsay groce gardner fort worth death

Studies have indicated that as the core body temperature falls to a critical level, constricted blood vessels that retain body heat expand and give off an exaggerated sensation of being hot. In cases of paradoxical undressing, the hypothermia victim, feeling hot but in the cold, then irrationally begins to undress in an attempt to stay cool. According to the U.S. National Library of Medicine National Institutes of Health, in a recent study of hypothermia victims, 30 percent involved cases of paradoxical undressing.

What happened to Lindsay and Hailey?

In a post from August 2013, Lindsay wrote about stress concerning a move to Lancaster, California.  "Why can’t things just go the way you plan them? Why does God constantly have another path? These are things I get to thinking. You’ve probably thought them before too. Why do we even bother thinking that? He already had a path. It’s our scared insecure brains that try to tie all the knots of false insecurity together into believing that we are going to be ok because of our ‘plan'. Even though, constantly, again and again, our plan fails, falls apart, crumbles, vanishes. But God’s plans are always solid. He always follows through and takes care of us."

These deaths in Fort Worth are very strange. Why did Lindsay crash her car so far off the road into trees near Altamesa Boulevard?

Lindsay Gardner and baby Hailey Gardner

Lindsay was driving a 1996 Toyota Camry. This model was recalled because of a catastrophic fault that caused the failure of the accelerator cable. Many drivers were seriously injured, with as many as 100 deaths in the United States. Toyota was the subject of a lawsuit. If Lindsay floored the accelerator, the cable would likely have locked, keeping the car moving at maximum speed. The only solution would have been to put the car in neutral and turn off the engine. A clear head would be needed to figure this out for someone confronted with this unexpected sudden acceleration, and for most who experienced this issue, it was difficult to take corrective action in time.

Is it really plausible she suffered paradoxical undressing caused by hypothermia with the safety of the car less than 200 yards away? Why did the police fail to see the scattered clothes and bodies so close to the abandoned car?

StrangeOutdoors Exclusive Members Only Area
$15.99
One time

Exclusive articles for members of StrangeOutdoors that are not available elsewhere on the site.


✓ 64 articles as of December 2024
✓ One time fee
✓ Exclusive members-only multi-blog articles

See the latest Exclusive members-only articles on StrangeOutdoors.com

Read other Strange Stories from Texas

The strange disappearance of Lauren Colvin Thompson near Rockhill in Texas

The mysterious disappearance of Texas State student Jason Landry

The Olivia Jane Mabel story - supernatural event or viral marketing hoax

The disturbing disappearance of Nicholas Patrick Barclay from Texas and the imposter (Member only)

Sources

http://www.star-telegram.com/news/local/community/fort-worth/article6727884.html

http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-2911631/Bodies-field-near-crashed-car-identified-artist-27-1-year-old-daughter-police-don-t-know-mother-child.html#ixzz56Ukw8ivw

http://www.star-telegram.com/news/local/community/fort-worth/article12733430.html

https://www.nbcdfw.com/news/local/Medical-Examiner-Rules-in-Cause-of-Death-of-Woman-Child-Found-in-Fort-Worth-Field-295250931.html

Previous
Previous

The disappearance and death of Janet Castrejon in the Chiricahua Mountains

Next
Next

The search for Anna Schmidt at Munra Point in Oregon