Woman shot in the back with an arrow ???

Ponytail

New Member
From the headlines page...
WOMAN STRUCK BY ARROW: At approximately 5a.m. on January 19, Natasha M. Kelly was walking on Great Mills Road in Lexington Park when she was struck in the back by an arrow. The victim was flown to PG Shock Trauma Center by Trooper 2. St. Mary's County Deputies apprehended Luis R. Fuentes, 43, of Lexington Park, and charged him with 1st Degree Assault. It was determined that Fuentes had shot the arrow from the area of his residence at the victim as she walked on the sidewalk. He was incarcerated at the St. Mary's County Detention Center.


Anybody have anymore info on this nut? First Degree Assault?? Why not Attempted Murder? Was he drunk? Or was he target practicing and missed? or both?
 

bresamil

wandering aimlessly
Just heard about it this morning. I think he should be charged with attempted murder.

Welcome to St. Mary's Today Online Edition!

Arrow didn't come from Injuns; but from jilted Cupid
By Kenneth C. Rossignol
ST. MARY'S TODAY

LEXINGTON PARK (Jan. 20, 2008) ---- The only ones who used to aim their arrows and pull back on their bows in the woods of Jarboesville (the name of the small crossroads, prior to Lexington Park), along the Three Notch Trail, were the Mattapany Indian tribe, but since they didn't take aim at Leonard Calvert and the early settlers at St. Mary's City or any person, instead killing only deer and other game, it appears that laying the blame on Indians for an arrow passing into the back of a Lexington Park street walker is unfair and was instead allegedly due to a jilted Cupid.

In short, a woman who frequently walks the streets at night and is well known to police, was the target of a murderous act early on Saturday morning as she walked along Great Mills Road.
Natasha Kelly, 22, of Lexington Park, was walking along Rt. 246 with her boyfriend in front of the Checkers when she said an arrow came swirling through the dark night and struck her in the back.

Kelly and her boyfriend had been arguing and had been separated by about a 1/4 block when the man said Kelly suddenly started screaming. He said he ran to her side to find her sprawled on the pavement with an arrow sticking out of her back.

The man pulled the arrow out of the woman and then ran out into the highway to flag down help from a passing motorist. St. Mary's deputies arrived on the scene and began tracking down a man who may have been involved in the incident but had left the area in a blue Jeep.

The Lexington Park Volunteer Rescue Squad responded to a call from police to assist and upon examining the woman's arrow wound, called for a helicopter to fly the woman to a trauma center. Bay District volunteers sent an engine over to the rear parking lot of Millison Plaza and prepared a landing zone for Trooper Two which landed and boarded their patient.

The injured woman told police that she didn't know who fired the arrow at her, which was laying next to her on the pavement.

Detectives from the Bureau of Criminal Investigations, a joint investigation unit of the Maryland State Police and the St. Mary's Sheriff's Department, began to follow up immediately on the case which was started by St. Mary's Deputy Margaret Smolarsky.

Officers learned that the man who was driving the Jeep, had actually been the man who lived in a second floor apartment in a two story house across the street from Checkers. The police learned that the man was in fact the one who aimed and fired the arrow from his apartment and sent the arrow whizzing across the highway, striking Kelly in the back.

Police say that the woman's bulky coat kept her from suffering more serious damage as the coat slowed the rate of entry for the arrow.

The man told police that he had handled the arrow once he came to the scene, but a witness and the victim contradicted the man's story, making his only opportunity to place his fingerprints on the arrow the time he had fired the arrow with the bow from his window.

Other than the man who pulled the arrow from the woman's back, the next person to handle it was a deputy.

There, you have it. It was about 28 degrees on a cold January night, a young woman who police consider to be a crackhead was walking the streets of Lexington Park and an arrow whirled across a highway and pierced her back as she passed in front of a twin drive-thru burger joint.

This woman who is living a fractured life, dependent on selling herself short and being preyed upon by others, came close to being murdered by a man with a job at Pax River, who police say had a prior relationship with her. He was identified as Luis R. Fuentes , 43, of Lexington Park. A different type of arrow is slung by Cupid all over the area in just another three weeks as the patron saint of lovers, St. Valentine, is marked by a massive display of affection.

This weekend's nearly murderous act of archery was just another tale from the Naked City. There are a thousand more.
 
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foodcritic

New Member
The St. Mary story seems to be pretty accurate. The suspect has some history of other weapons violations. Just because he was not charged with more serious crimes does not mean he won't be. In most cases a Grand Jury will hand down more serious charges when the investigators put more of the evidence/case together and present it....
 

wisdom

New Member
Nice. Do you really mean you want to kill "crack-hos?" I bet you've never done anything wrong, nor broken a law before in your entire life. Get a grip edinsomd. This girl, no matter what she did doesn't deserve to be shot in the back. Low life scum like Fuentes should be hunted down by the same manner and shot in the back with their own arrows.
 
C

czygvtwkr

Guest
Someone must have a wife/daughter/mom that is a crack whore.
 
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