Tag Archive for 'lexington police'Page 2 of 3

Retired nurse beaten to death

By Steve Lannen
slannen@herald-leader.com

On a wet and freezing Monday evening, Lillie McGlothen placed a wreath outside her mother’s home.

Steps away, the front door to Marilyn Hegge’s brown brick ranch had been sealed by forensics investigators. On Sunday, which was Hegge’s 78th birthday, a granddaughter found her body beaten inside.

“It’s scary not knowing what happened to her,” McGlothen said. “I can’t think of anyone who would do this to her.”

Lexington police are investigating Hegge’s death as a homicide. She died of a head injury after an assault, according to a Fayette County coroner’s report.

Shortly before 4 p.m. Sunday, police were called to Hegge’s home at 3728 Red River Drive, off Man o’ War Boulevard near Tates Creek Road, Lexington police Lt. Scott Blakely said.

Blakely said an adult granddaughter found Hegge in a bedroom, and the house was not broken into.

Neighbors said Hegge, who used a walker to get around, lived alone. A granddaughter sometimes stayed with her.

Hegge was retired from the University of Kentucky, where she worked as a neonatal nurse until 1992, a UK spokeswoman said.

She never married but adopted two children from Costa Rica, one of those McGlothen.

“She was a great woman. She adopted me when I was 5 years old. She was a single parent, she worked all her life. She took care of everybody,” McGlothen said.

Days before, the family gathered at the house to celebrate Thanksgiving. Many had planned to gather again on Sunday for Hegge’s birthday.

“I’m still stunned. I can’t believe she is gone,” McGlothen said.

Gaye Whalen, a nurse and lactation consultant who worked with Hegge at UK and worshiped with her at the Newman Center, described her as a humble, unassuming person.

“She’s just a very nurturing person and really gave a lot to her patients and her grandchildren,” Whalen said. “It’s very shocking to think that somebody that gives so much of their heart and soul … that something bad could happen.”

Chris Brown said he’d known Hegge for more than 15 years. He did some handiwork around the house and occasionally fixed her car.

Brown said he received a phone call Monday morning telling him Hegge was dead.

“At first, I thought it might have been a mistake,” he said. “I just can’t believe she’d have any trouble with anybody.”

Anyone with information is asked to call Lexington police, (859) 258-3700.

Herald-Leader Staff Writer Karla Ward contributed to this report.

Earlier: Lexington death ruled a homicide

Share/Save/Bookmark

Lexington death ruled a homicide

By Greg Kocher
gkocher1@herald-leader.com

Lexington police are investigating the Sunday afternoon death of a 78-year-old woman as a homicide.

Shortly before 4 p.m., police were called to 3728 Red River Drive in south Lexington, where a woman had found her grandmother dead, said Lexington police Lt. Scott Blakely.

Blakely initially said circumstances surrounding the death led police to believe it is “suspicious,” but he would not give other details to explain why.

“At this point, all I’m going to say is it’s suspicious,” Blakely said shortly before 6 p.m. Sunday.

As the evening and investigation progressed, Blakely said the death is being investigated as a homicide.

The grandmother, whose identity police have not released, lived alone, Blakely said. He did say she was found in a bedroom and that there was no forced entry to the house.

Police have interviewed several relatives.

Share/Save/Bookmark

Police search for armed robbery suspect

Fifth-Third Bank Robbery Suspect on Nov. 3, 2008

Fifth-Third Bank Robbery Suspect on Nov. 3, 2008

An armed man wearing a disguise ran into the Fifth Third Bank, located at 2225 Versailles Road at approximately 11:44 a.m. today, displaying a handgun and demanding money. Bank tellers complied with his demands and the man fled the bank on foot with an undisclosed amount of money. No one that was present was injured.

The suspect is described as a white male, approximately 6’0” to 6’2” tall and around 185 pounds. He was wearing blue jeans, a light colored long-sleeved jacket or shirt, a blonde wig and a transparent clown mask that had painted red lips and blue eyes. He was carrying a small tan bag. Attached are surveillance photographs taken of the suspect.

Anyone with information relating to this investigation is asked to please contact the Personal Crimes Section at (859) 258-3700 or Bluegrass Crime Stoppers at (859) 253-2020.

Share/Save/Bookmark

Investigators call April death a homicide

By Steve Lannen

slannen@herald-leader.com

Family members found Regina Renea Johnson dead on her bed in early April.

On Tuesday, more than six months later, authorities said publicly that the 44-year-old Lexington woman was murdered.

Jones was strangled and suffocated, said a Fayette County coroner’s press release on Tuesday. An autopsy was conducted in April at the state medical examiner’s office in Frankfort and later ruled a homicide.

“From day one, in my heart, I thought it was a homicide and not a natural cause of death,” said Camisha Young, a longtime close friend. “It’s been real hard just knowing she was murdered and not having any answer as to how.”

Lexington police Lt. James Curless said Tuesday evening that police early on thought Johnson’s death was suspicious.

“The more we looked at it, the more concerns we had about it,” he said.

Announcing the case in the local media could help shed more light on Johnson’s death, Curless said. “There are people we feel who have information that could help us resolve this case,” he said.

Last night, Young stood outside the apartments where Johnson died at 420 Rogers Road, off North Broadway and across from the Joyland Bowl and Park.

Johnson had lived there for about three months with three teenage children and a 2-year-old grandchild, Young said. Her daughter’s boyfriend also lived with them, she said.

She recalled a phone conversation she had with Johnson, who told her she was going to ask the boyfriend to move out of the house because she thought he was causing problems for her daughter.

Young, however, doesn’t know what happened next.

“There were four people in the house, no (signs of) breaking in. Somebody knows something,” she said.

Anyone with information is asked to call Lexington police at (859) 258-3700 or call CrimeStoppers (859) 253-2020.

Share/Save/Bookmark

Man found shot Thursday near nightclub

By Shawntaye Hopkins
shopkins@herald-leader.com

A man was shot multiple times in the torso early Thursday outside a club in North Lexington, Lexington police said.

Ludger Janvier, 32, was taken to University of Kentucky Hospital after Lexington police found him injured near Russell Cave and New Circle roads about 2:45 a.m.

He was listed in critical condition Thursday.

It appears the man was shot outside Diva’s Gentleman’s Club on Russell Cave Road, but he was on a nearby corner, Officer Ann Gutierrez, a Lexington police spokeswoman, said.

Gutierrez said police were called to the club twice for disorders before Janvier was found injured. But, at this time, investigators don’t think those incidents were related to the shooting.

Police do not have any suspects in the case and request that anyone with more information, please call 258-3700.

Share/Save/Bookmark

Masseur faces sex charge

By Steve Lannen
slannen@herald-leader.com

A Lexington masseur was arrested on a third-degree sexual abuse charge on Friday after a female client says she was touched inappropriately.

Michael R. Rice

Michael R. Rice

Michael Ray Rice, 51, a therapist at Massage Oasis, located at 3150 Custer Drive, was arrested after police say a woman told them she was touched in a sexual manner without her consent.

The incident allegedly occurred as the woman received a massage on Sunday.

Third-degree sexual abuse is a class B misdemeanor punishable by up to 30 days in jail.

Court records say police set up a recorded phone call in which the alleged victim called Rice and he repotedly confessed and “asked the victim to forgive him.”

Share/Save/Bookmark

Man burned in fiery crash

By Steve Lannen
slannen@herald-leader.com

A man was burned after a northbound minivan crashed into a tree and caught fire on Russell Cave Road.

The crash occurred about 10:45 p.m. just north of Huffman Mill Road, said Lexington Police Lt. Melissa Sedlaczek.

Two men were taken to the University of Kentucky hospital. At least one suffered burns, she said.

Russell Cave Road was shut down for a few hours while police investigated the crash, Sedlaczek said.

Share/Save/Bookmark

Resident shoots and kills intruder; arrest made

By Shawntaye Hopkins
shopkins@herald-leader.com

UPDATED AT 4:37 P.M.: Lexington police have made an arrest in a burglary that turned fatal Wednesday morning at an apartment complex near Hamburg Pavilion.

Reginald Laron Jones, 24, of Lexington has been charged with first-degree burglary.

Police say he was one of three people, including a man who was killed by a male resident in the apartment and a female, who charged into the apartment Wednesday morning.

Officers are conferring with the Commonwealth’s Attorney’s Office as they explore whether the shooting was self-defense, said Officer Ann Gutierrez, a Lexington police spokeswoman. The shooting was being treated as a homicide Wednesday morning as police canvassed an area at Gleneagles Apartments at 2920 Polo Club Boulevard and interviewed witnesses.

The victim and the shooter have not been identified.

Fayette County Coroner Gary Ginn said the man appears to be in his late 20s or early 30s. He had not yet checked for an ID.

Ginn said he did not know where the man was shot or how many times he was shot.

Neighbors said they heard people yelling followed by at least three gunshots. The shooting was reported to police about 8:30 a.m.

A neighbor, who heard gunshots, flagged down officers and directed them to the apartment, Gutierrez said.

Investigators were told the couple who lives in the apartment answered knocks at the door and were “rushed by several people,” Gutierrez said.

The intruders had handguns, she said. One of the occupants in the apartment got a handgun and shot one of the men. He was found dead inside the apartment when police arrived.

There were a lot of people at the scene when police arrived, Gutierrez said. And officers were interviewing them Wednesday afternoon, trying to determine whether they were involved.

 

Investigators also have not figured out why the intruders were at the apartment and whether they knew the residents.

Gutierrez said police are looking at whether a 2006 law, commonly called the castle doctrine, applies to this case.

Under the law, Kentucky residents can shoot an intruder without fear of being arrested. The National Rifle Association has lobbied for such laws across the country. 

Jeff Haddix said his 27-year-old daughter and her boyfriend live at the apartment where the shooting took place. He did not want to give his daughter’s name, but he quietly waited for several hours at the crime scene with other relatives as the woman was interviewed by police.

Haddix said police told him that she’s OK; “just a little shaken up.” He said he was “terrified” when he arrived at the apartment complex and saw the police cruisers. He said he was not able to talk to his daughter at all.

He mouthed a few words to her as she sat in the back of a police cruiser. He asked if she wanted something to drink.

Share/Save/Bookmark

Store scrutinized for failing to help child in van

(Also read Bed Bath & Beyond Belief at http://mothertongue.bloginky.com/2008/09/08/bed-bath-beyond-belief/)

By Brandon Ortiz and Beth Musgrave
bortiz@herald-leader.com

UPDATED at 8:02 a.m.:

Prosecutors are reviewing state law to determine whether Bed Bath & Beyond should be charged for refusing to call police because a toddler was locked in a van in a Lexington parking lot.

First Assistant Fayette County Attorney Brian Mattone said he spent most of Sunday looking at Kentucky’s laws dealing with the reporting of child abuse. As of Monday evening, Mattone said, he had not yet decided whether Bed Bath & Beyond could be charged for failing to assist Randy and Nancy Belcher, a Danville couple who had discovered a child locked inside a van in the parking lot on Nicholasville Road.

Tanuja

Tanuja

A manager at the store told the couple — and later, police — that it was the store’s policy not to get involved in parking lot incidents.

But on Monday, an official at Bed Bath & Beyond’s corporate headquarters in New Jersey said in a written statement that the store manager must have been confused about the company’s policies.

“Be assured that, at Bed Bath & Beyond, we take matters such as these very seriously,” said Hank Reinhart, vice president of customer service. “We train our associates for emergency situations. Unfortunately, this situation was not handled in the way we would have expected it to be handled. We are taking this opportunity to retrain our associates.”

The child’s mother, Tanuja R. Patel, was arraigned Monday in Fayette District Court. She pleaded not guilty to first-degree wanton endangerment. Patel’s attorney, Fred Peters, said afterward that Patel thought she had left the van, a 2007 Honda Odyssey, running with the air conditioning on.

Peters said the level of her charge is “completely inappropriate.” Peters said Patel is being charged at the same level as someone who fires a gun at someone. At most, he said, the charge should have been child endangerment.

Mattone disagreed. Considering how long the mother was in the store, and how quickly cars can heat up, “it is such a dangerous situation it obviously could have been much worse,” he said.

Patel, 37, was released from the Fayette County Detention Center after posting a $5,000 cash bond. As a condition of the bond, she is not to have any contact with the child, 3-year-old Ryan Patel.

Peters said he is trying to get the conditions changed because the mother and child live in the same house.

A preliminary hearing for Tenuja Patel was scheduled for Sept. 26 in Fayette District Court.

Randy and Nancy Belcher were just getting out of their truck about 2:30 p.m. on Saturday when Nancy Belcher told her husband she thought there was a child in the van parked next to them. When the boy did not respond to several knocks on the window, they went into Bed Bath & Beyond and asked one of the clerks if they could use the public-address system to let customers know there was a child in a hot van.

The clerk called a manager who was less than helpful, Randy Belcher said Monday. “She said ‘we don’t deal with anything that goes on in our parking lot,’” Belcher said.

The manager also refused to phone the police or to let the Belchers use the store’s phone to dial 911. Randy Belcher had a phone locked inside his truck, and he eventually used it to call the police.

Lexington police Officer Tommy Puckett was among several officers who responded to the call on Saturday. After hearing the Belchers’ story, “I thought there must have been some kind of miscommunication,” he said Monday. But when Puckett went into the store and talked to the manager, who would not give her last name, she said it was against company policy to get involved with anything that happens in the parking lot.

“I was absolutely shocked speechless. This is one of the most disturbing things I’ve seen since I’ve been a cop,” said Puckett, an officer of nearly 35 years. “Morally, I just can’t believe that you would not call. What if that was your child out there?”

Michelle Bowe, of Nicholasville, said she saw the boy sleeping in a car seat inside the van on an 80-degree day. The van had its windows shut and was not running.

She said the sun was directly on the boy, who was wearing a long-sleeved shirt and pants and was under a blanket.

“You could see the sweat on him,” Bowe said. “I didn’t know if he was breathing. You couldn’t tell.”

Bowe said they talked about breaking a window to save the child, but then police arrived. Officers used a small device to break the window after the boy did not respond to repeated taps on the window, Belcher said. Even after the officer got the boy out, he wouldn’t wake, Belcher said.

“My heart just dropped to the ground,” Belcher said. “My wife was crying, the other woman was crying.”

Bowe and Belcher said the child had spent at least 20 to 30 minutes in the van.

According to a police report, Ryan awakened only after he was shaken by police. He was treated by paramedics and given fluids but was not taken to the hospital, witnesses said.

Reinhart said he knew of no Bed Bath & Beyond policy that would have prohibited the store manager from helping.

“We train our associates on how to respond to common emergency situations and we have no policies that should have impeded our ability to respond in this case,” Reinhart said. “This situation was not handled the way we would have expected it to be handled.”

Belcher said he was thankful that he and his wife and Bowe were there to help the boy. “I just want to thank the Lord that we were in the right place at the right time and that the boy is OK.”

Bowe, a mother of four, said she has peeked into the back seats of cars ever since hearing about an incident in the news a few years ago.

“I just kind of look in car windows, to be honest with you,” she said. “I mean, I have four children. When … you’re a mom, you’re just pretty cautious.”

Belcher said he and his wife had been going to buy something at the store on Saturday, but they decided to go home instead.

“I know we’re not going to go back in there,” he said.

Share/Save/Bookmark

Police seek three suspects in church burglaries

By Jim Warren
jwarren@herald-leader.com

Lexington police are looking for three suspects in a series of burglaries at churches on Lexington’s Eastland Parkway.

Officers released photographs of the three men that were snapped earlier this week by a surveillance camera at a Thornton’s gas station on Winchester Road.

Church day care suspects

Church day care suspects

Police suspect that the three men in the pictures are the church burglars, based on stolen items that were found on the property of the gas station and photos taken by surveillance cameras at one or more of the locations that were burglarized, authorities said.

According to police reports, the Christ Centered Church, Our Redeemer Lutheran Church, and Aldersgate United Methodist Church all have been burglarized recently, along with The Big Blue Bird Early Childhood Center. All are on Eastland Parkway.

The suspects also might be involved in an attempted burglary Thursday at Lexington United Baptist Church on Rockwell Road, police said.

Police said surveillance cameras took some indistinct photographs during the recent burglaries.

But a break came earlier this week, when police received a tip that some items taken in the recent burglaries had been left on the property of a gas station on Winchester Road. Police haven’t described the items.

Police then checked pictures taken by surveillance cameras at the station and identified three men thought to have left the missing items.

Anyone knowing the suspects is asked to contact the Lexington Police Department.

Share/Save/Bookmark