Tag Archive for 'died'

Pedestrian hit by Jeep dies

UPDATED with IDs of victim and driver.

By Shawntaye Hopkins
shopkins@herald-leader.com

A pedestrian crossing South Broadway near Red Mile during a rainstorm Wednesday morning died after he was struck by a Jeep, Lexington police say.

(David Stephenson | Staff) Lexington police technician David Bochenek, left, and Sgt. Paul Simms, right, investigated the scene of an accident involving a pedestrian on South Broadway at Gibson Avenue in Lexington Wednesday.

(David Stephenson | Staff) Lexington police technician David Bochenek, left, and Sgt. Paul Simms, right, investigated the scene of an accident involving a pedestrian on South Broadway at Gibson Avenue in Lexington Wednesday.

Authorities identified the man Wednesday afternoon as Eugene Childress, 74, after notifying family and next of kin.

Childress was struck while walking across South Broadway toward Rally’s restaurant about 7 a.m. He was not within a painted crosswalk, Lexington police Sgt. Paul Simms said.

Police say the driver, Shannon Hibbetts, of Georgetown, had the right-of-way, and charges are not expected against her. She was not injured.

“He was in a place that most people wouldn’t expect to see a pedestrian,” Simms said.

Hibbetts, who was headed to work at Saint Joseph Hospital, was traveling south on South Broadway, Simms said.

She told police she didn’t see the man until it was too late, and she stepped on her brakes immediately, Simms said. The Jeep stopped near American Avenue.

The wreck smashed the front of the Jeep. Childress was hit on his left side and had several injuries, including a broken leg and severe chest and head injuries, Simms said.

Hibbetts returned to the scene of the wreck as Lexington police’s Collision Reconstruction Unit worked a few hours after the accident.

The jeep was later towed by Bluegrass Towing Service.

Simms said it does not appear that speed or alcohol were factors in the crash. Hibbetts agreed to a blood test, but results will likely not be available for weeks. Simms said the rainy weather, and darkness, were probably significant factors.

Lexington police believe the she was traveling at, or below, the posted speed limit of 45 miles per hour, and the traffic light was green.

“Right now, we just don’t see any criminal culpability unless some things change down the road,” Simms said.

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Mother charged with murdering her daughter pleads not guilty

By Ashlee Clark
aclark@herald-leader.com

WINCHESTER — A Winchester mother who has been charged with murder in the death of her 4-year-old daughter pleaded not guilty Wednesday.

Jessilyn Robinson was charged last week with murder after investigators said her 4-year-old daughter died of abuse four months ago instead of a fall.

Jessilyn Robinson was charged last week with murder after investigators said her 4-year-old daughter died of abuse four months ago instead of a fall.

Jessilyn C. Robinson, 34, was arrested Sept. 25 in the death of Faith Raeanne Robinson, who died of a closed head injury on May 29. Robinson told paramedics that Faith had fallen in the bathtub.

Robinson appeared in Clark District Court Wednesday through a video feed from Clark County jail for her arraignment. She is being held in lieu of a $250,000 cash bond. Robinson will return to district court Oct. 8 for a preliminary hearing.

Robinson’s attorney, Andrew Stephens, requested that her bond be lowered because of her cooperation in the social services investigation that began after Faith’s death. Her attorney pointed out that she made numerous appearances in family court and she never fled.

“If she had chosen to flee, she had no reason not to,” Stephens told the judge. 

 Clark County District Judge Earl-Ray Neal denied the motion.

Few details have been released about the case.

Clark County Sheriff Berl Perdue said last week that Jessilyn Robinson told paramedics on May 28 that Faith fell in the bathtub at her McClure Road home. Faith was initially taken to Clark Regional Medical Center and then to University of Kentucky Hospital, where she died the next day of a brain injury, Perdue said.

Doctors said the injuries were inconsistent with a fall, Perdue said.

Because Faith had no outward injuries, deputies with the sheriff’s department waited until they received the official medical examiner’s report on her autopsy before arresting Robinson on Sept. 25, Perdue said. 

The medical examiner’s report stated that Faith had sustained a subdural hematoma — a traumatic brain injury — and retinal hemorrhaging, which indicated that she had been shaken violently, Perdue said.

Perdue has said that Robinson’s husband, Joseph, is not a suspect in the case because he was not home when Faith was injured.

But Cindy Strunk, Jessilyn Robinson’s mother, disagrees..

“It’s not fair,” Strunk said. “Both parents should be investigated for this.”

Strunk said both parents were “a little rough” on the 4-year-old, but doesn’t think Jessilyn Robinson abused the child.

“As a grandmother, I should’ve spoke out long before now,” said Strunk, during a telephone interview from her home in Charlestown, R.I. She said she hadn’t seen since the family since last December.

Robinson declined to comment early this week. Her husband did not respond to phone calls and e-mails requesting comment.

On his MySpace.com page, Joseph Robinson described in a June 1 blog entry his account of what happened to Faith.

“Last Wednesday our middle child, Faith, had an accident in the home and hit her head in a fall,” Robinson wrote. “She was initially OK, but increasingly became listless to the point of finally being unconscious.”

Joseph Robinson wrote that Faith was diagnosed with having “a stroke on both sides of her brain due to the bleeding caused by the injury.”

Joseph Robinson has custody of the couple’s two other children. 

Before her arrest, Jessilyn Robinson had been staying at an apartment on Lexington Avenue in Winchester.

Strunk said the Robinsons adopted Faith and their youngest child, a boy, while the family lived in Rhode Island. She said the family moved to Winchester late last year.

Strunk said she is close to her daughter and grandchildren. Jessilyn Robinson had been keeping Strunk updated throughout the investigation until her arrest.

“She has said all along ever since the investigation (began) that they are putting the blame on her because she was the one at home at the time,” Strunk said.

Strunk wasn’t aware that her daughter was arrested until noon Monday. 

“I don’t know about nothing,” she said. “I am in total darkness about everything.”

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Report: Immigrant who died in jail hanged herself

By Jillian Ogawa
jogawa@herald-leader.com

The state medical examiner’s office released a preliminary autopsy report for the Salvadoran immigrant who died last month in the Franklin County jail while awaiting deportation.

Investigators have said Ana Romero, 44, died Aug. 21, but it had not been clear how she died.

Romero’s family and their attorney, Matthew Pippin of Louisville, had been inquiring about the report for weeks.

According to the preliminary autopsy report, which was obtained Friday by the Herald-Leader, says Romero “hanged self by neck with sheet.”

Ana Romero

Ana Romero

It says she died of asphyxia from hanging.

The jail took Romero to the hospital late Aug. 21. She was pronounced dead on Aug. 22, according to the report.

The report, which has been given to Franklin County Coroner Will Harrod, says the manner of death is still pending because there are a number of things that are still unknown, such as a toxicology report and circumstances of death.

Romero’s family had been inquiring about the circumstances surrounding her death. Last week, the family decided to seek the opinion of George Nichols II because they were concerned that officials were not aggressively investigating the case.

The Kentucky State Police also announced last week it is investigating the death as a suicide by hanging.

Romero, who came to Kentucky from El Salvador three years ago, was arrested Jan. 14 by state police after giving federal immigration officials a false identification card. Aguilar said officers were looking for another suspect when they knocked on Romero’s door.

As a result of the January charges, Romero spent five months in the Shelby County jail and was transferred to the Franklin County Regional Jail in May, where she stayed the last four months. Romero entered a guilty plea Aug. 7. She was required to pay a $100 fine, but she did not receive additional jail time.

Family members say that shortly before she died, Romero was placed in isolation for refusing to eat. Aguilar said she had telephoned several times from the jail saying her stomach hurt and she was vomiting. She said the food smelled bad and that something was wrong with it.

Pippin has said Harrod told him Romero was found Aug. 21 with a sheet around her neck.

Romero’s brother-in-law Mario Aguilar and other family members do not think she committed suicide. They wanted to hire Nichols to conduct a second autopsy if he finds it necessary. He has said he often can make a determination by reviewing the results of the first autopsy.

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