Key PointsPolice conducted an unusual rescue after a toddler became stuck in a Hello Kitty claw machine. The three-year-old climbed into the prize dispenser chute when his father looked away and became trapped.The child appeared unfazed by his situation, with a video showing him grinning as he sat in a pile of toys.
An eager three-year-old who took the direct approach while trying to win a shopping centre toy has ended up stuck inside a claw machine.
The toddler loves “skills testers” and was trying his luck while his family were standing outside Coles at a Capalaba, south of Brisbane, on Saturday night.
His father Timothy looked away “for a second” and suddenly his son had crawled into the prize dispenser chute.
“Head in, bum in, I had no time to react,” he said.
“At first, it was funny and I couldn’t help but laugh.”
Then reality sank in and he had to figure out how to get his son, who was “having the time of his life”, out of the machine.
“I called my dad and he said, ‘How many $2 coins do you have? We can try and win him back,'” he said.
Police smashed the glass of the toy machine to rescue the child trapped inside. Source: AAP / Supplied
Earlier, police released a video of the unusual rescue where they extracted the little boy by smashing the glass.
“This is a first in 11 years of policing. I didn’t expect this one to come up,” responding officer Senior Constable Stuart Power said.
Despite the police presence, the toddler was in no rush to get out, with the video showing the youngster with a grin plastered across his face as he sat among a pile of popular Japanese character Hello Kitty plush toys.
His parents had to coax him to the back corner of the machine so officers could safely remove him.
“Cover your eyes. Hide,” his mother told him as officers smashed the enclosure before lifting the toddler to safety.
“You won a prize. Which one do you want?” a police officer asked as he stood with his family.
The family has since walked past the now-replaced claw machine but the boy seems to have learnt his lesson.
“He pointed to the machine and said, ‘Don’t worry Dad, I won’t do it again,'” his father said.