Dad arrested for putting toddler in car trunk claims it was a staged experiment to see if people would intervene

A Chicago man was arrested after bystanders saw him put his 3-year-old son in the trunk of his car. (Photo: Supergenijalac/Getty Images)
A Chicago man was arrested after bystanders saw him put his 3-year-old son in the trunk of his car. (Photo: Supergenijalac/Getty Images)

A Chicago dad has been arrested and charged with misdemeanor child endangerment after bystanders saw him put his 3-year-old son into the trunk of his car — but he says that it was all for show, the Chicago Tribune reports.

Boguslaw Matlak, 28, and the boy’s mother, Laura Quijano, have since lost temporary custody of the child following the Sept. 2 incident in Norridge, Ill. Matlak claims he appeared to lock his toddler in the trunk of his Audi — insisting that the back seat was lowered so that the boy could crawl out — as a social experiment to see if bystanders would intervene for a display of bad parenting.

The purpose of the alleged experiment, he maintains, was “just to send awareness to other people to get involved. When people see something wrong, they won’t get involved. And when it comes down to kids, it’s everybody’s business to get involved.”

Matlak says he was inspired to stage the scene after he observed a couple exposing a child to secondhand smoke in a parked car. While it’s unclear if he intervened in that situation, the three women who later saw him put his son in the trunk in the parking lot of a local Panera Bread didn’t hesitate to call police. The witnesses told authorities that it was a hot day — 89 degrees — and that Matlak had told his son that he was going into the trunk as punishment.

Though Matlak later left the scene with the child and Quijano, he returned to the Panera Bread — which is when he was arrested. Following further investigation, police noted that the boy “appeared fine and unharmed.”

According to Matlak, the “experiment” was filmed and had been acted out a few times — with no consequence other than a security guard being called — before the Panera Bread demonstration. Quijano and a friend, Nicholas Johnson, have backed up his claims.

“We expected people to understand what we did, but there was the police and then the arrest,” Johnson told the paper. “I was kind of shocked, like, ‘Why did this happen?’”

Norridge police chief David Disselhorst has defended the officers’ action.

“I think our guys did the right thing in terms of charging him,” Disselhorst said. “We’re always going to lean on what’s in the best interest of the child. Anybody who would put their kid in the trunk of a car, even as a joke, is going to have some explaining to do.”

Matlak is due in court on Sept. 28 regarding the child endangerment charge, and the Department of Children and Family Services has launched an ongoing investigation. While Quijana has not been charged, she and Matlak are restricted to visiting their son while relatives look after him during the investigation.

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