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{"url":"//www.washingtonpost.com/video/c/embed/75d6b8aa-b942-11e4-bc30-a4e75503948a","width":590,"height":400,"shortcode":"[protected-iframe id=\"1497950fddc0e8897f604b14468931c9-37979189-35425974\" info=\"//www.washingtonpost.com/video/c/embed/75d6b8aa-b942-11e4-bc30-a4e75503948a\" width=\"590\" height=\"400\" frameborder=\"0\" scrolling=\"no\"]","frame_id":"1497950fddc0e8897f604b14468931c9-37979189-35425974","type":"iframe","channels":["desktop","tablet","phone"]}A U.S. Consumer and Product Safety Commission video on the dangers of large furniture in children’s bedrooms.

The three children, Theodore McGee, Camden Ellis and Curren Collas, were all close in age — between 22 months and 2 years old. All boys died within a span of two years. The cause, in each case, was the same: a tragic accident involving tipped-over Ikea furniture.

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Each death happened at home; each death came as its own unimaginable shock. Curren’s mother, Jackie Collas, took to Facebook and her blog, Heaven Has a Hero, to go public with the story of how a dangerous dresser claimed her son’s life. Collas entered Curren’s room on a February morning in 2014 to dress the toddler for breakfast. The instant she opened his door, she knew something was wrong.

“The dresser was completely flipped over. Then I saw that his body was trapped underneath the dresser,” Collas wrote. “At that point I started screaming.”

https://www.facebook.com/photo.php?fbid=10207221719212777&set=a.1472631467249.69022.1577545890

In the wake of the tragedies, Ikea, the largest furniture retailer in the world, made the first in a series of attempts to correct the problem. Last July, the North American branch of the company partnered with the U.S. Consumer Product Safety Commission to launch a campaign offering free wall anchors to secure the dressers, using screws to hold the wardrobes upright. The program cited the popular Malm style, in particular, though that represented about a quarter of the roughly 29 million Ikea dressers targeted by the repair program. As of April, the Philadelphia Inquirer reported Ikea customers had requested some 300,000 anchoring kits.