Tag Archive for 'Penny Brown'

Brother of woman found in trunk arraigned

Herald-Leader Staff Report

The Georgetown man whose wheelchair-dependent sister’s mummified body was found in the trunk of his car has pleaded not guilty to charges in the case.

Timothy Allen Brown, 30, was arrested in October after investigators found his sister’s body. A Scott County grand jury indicted Brown in January and he was arraigned Friday in Scott Circuit Court on charges of abuse or neglect of an adult, tampering with physical evidence, eight counts of theft of over $300, endangering the welfare of a minor and abuse of a corpse. He pleaded not guilty.

Penny Brown’s body, wrapped in quilts and industrial plastic, was so badly decomposed that the state medical examiner’s office was unable to determine a cause of death. The body might have been in Timothy Brown’s apartment for up to two years, police said. Brown signed his sister out of a nursing home in 2006.

Penny Brown had stopped using her food stamps and didn’t use her medical card after she left Georgetown Healthcare, according to police reports. Investigators say Timothy Brown had been cashing his disabled sister’s Social Security Income checks, which amounted to $600 to $700 a month.

Brown is scheduled to return to court March 6 for a status hearing.

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Hearing rescheduled in mummified body case

GEORGETOWN — A hearing for the man whose wheelchair-dependent sister’s mummified body was found in his car trunk was postponed Thursday because he has obtained private counsel.

Timothy Allen Brown’s attorney was not present during his preliminary hearing in Scott District Court, so the hearing was rescheduled for 1:30 p.m. Nov. 20. Brown previously had been represented by public defender Doug Crickmer.

Brown, 30, pleaded not guilty Nov. 6 in Scott District Court to knowingly abusing or neglecting an adult, a felony, and endangering the welfare of a minor, a misdemeanor related to his 8-year-old son.

Police said the boy was removed from Brown’s apartment in September after social workers found filthy conditions there.

Investigators found 31-year-old Penny Brown’s body when they towed her brother’s car to Georgetown from St. Louis, more than 300 miles away. Someone complained that the car had been left on a street for days.

Penny Brown’s body, wrapped in quilts and industrial plastic, was so decomposed the state medical examiner’s office was unable to determine a cause of death. The body might have been in Timothy Brown’s apartment in Georgetown for up to two years, police said.

Brown signed his sister out of a nursing home in 2006.

Penny Brown had stopped using her food stamps and she didn’t use her medical card after she left Georgetown Healthcare, according to police reports.

Investigators say Timothy Brown had been cashing his disabled sister’s Social Security Income checks, which amounted to $600 to $700 a month.

Friends and neighbors told police they had never seen Penny Brown at her brother’s house. Her father told investigators he last spoke with her last December.

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Newspaper staffer’s cousins are main players in mummified body case

Maggie Greene says she knows about poverty and unconditional love.

And now the 22-year-old journalist - an intern for The State Journal - knows firsthand what it’s like being on the family end of a horrible news story.

For almost five years when she was a child, Greene lived in Owen County with her cousins Penny Michelle Brown and Tim Brown, who made national news this week.

Read the full story in the Frankfort State Journal

On Oct. 24, Penny Brown’s mummified body was found in the trunk of her brother’s car.

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Police: Woman found in trunk might have been dead 2 years

A Georgetown woman might have been dead two years before her body was discovered in the trunk of her brother’s car late last week, police said Monday.

Penny Brown’s body was found Friday in the trunk of a 1998 Chevy Malibu that police had towed from St. Louis. The car is registered in the name of her brother, Timothy Allen Brown of Georgetown.

Investigators were searching for Timothy Brown, 30, who is wanted for the knowing abuse or neglect of an adult and interstate flight to avoid prosecution. The FBI and the U.S. Marshal’s Service have assisted in the investigation.

Georgetown Police Chief Greg Reeves said Timothy Brown was cashing his disabled sister’s Social Security Income checks, which were between $600 and $700 per month. Police have stopped the checks.

“It’s pretty sad that someone would do this to a family member,” Reeves said during a news conference on Monday. “He was the caregiver and he was receiving a check, and he was cashing that check, and she wasn’t getting any care.”

While she might have been dead for two years, Reeves said no missing person report was made until Sept. 20.

That’s when police began looking for Penny Brown, 31, who used a wheelchair. Timothy Brown had initially told police that Penny was staying with an aunt, but a check with the aunt found that to be false, Reeves said.

When police later searched Timothy Brown’s apartment on Myers Drive, they did not find him or his sister, Reeves said.

The Chevy Malibu was found last week on Bancroft Avenue in St. Louis. Two Georgetown police detectives went to St. Louis and had a wrecker tow it back Wednesday to Scott County, where it remains in a locked facility.

Reeves said it took a couple of days to obtain a search warrant to look in the car for any clues about Timothy’s or Penny’s whereabouts.

Upon receiving the warrant Friday, police unlocked the trunk and “found a very badly decomposed body that was turned over” to Scott County Coroner John Goble and state medical examiner Emily Craig.

“The body was wrapped in blankets, which was an attempt to conceal the decomposition,” Reeves said. “It was bagged with industrial-grade plastic” possibly to contain the odor, he said.

Reeves said it does not appear that the body had been in the trunk of the car for two years. “We believe that the body had been stored in another location, put into the vehicle, and then transported to St. Louis,” Reeves said.

The cause of Penny Brown’s death is not known and might never be known “simply because of the condition of the body,” said Mike Wilder, executive director of the state medical examiner’s office in Frankfort.

“It’s a very complex ordeal when you have (skeletonized) remains and even some mummification involved,” Wilder said.

Penny Brown was discharged from Georgetown Healthcare Center, a nursing home, in 2006. That apparently was the last time anyone saw her, and police think she died shortly after that.

Not much is known about Timothy Brown. He was employed by a Speedway store on Darby Drive in Georgetown, not far from the apartment where he lived. Employees at Speedway declined to speak to a Herald-Leader reporter.

Timothy Brown is the father of an 8-year-old son, whom the state removed from the Georgetown apartment around the time that the missing person’s investigation began. Reeves didn’t have other information about that, but said Timothy Brown disappeared shortly after that.

Timothy Brown has no criminal record other than a misdemeanor charge for possession of marijuana last year. He paid $245 in a fine and court costs in January, according to records in the Scott Circuit Court Clerk’s Office.

Kristy Courtney, who lived in the apartment across from Timothy Brown, said he was quiet and “kept to himself.”

Timothy Brown is described as a white man with blue eyes and blond hair. He is 6 feet tall and weighs 230 to 250 pounds.

Reach Greg Kocher in the Nicholasville bureau at (859) 885-5775.

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