Woman charged after driving into people outside baby shower in Waldorf, authorities say
CHARLES COUNTY, Md. () — A Charles County woman is facing several charges after she allegedly drove into multiple people and cars outside of a baby shower in Waldorf last week.
Robin Lessette Alexander, 53, of Indian Head, was charged with eight counts of aggravated assault and two counts of destruction of property.
Authorities said Alexander was attending the baby shower on June 1 in the 1300 block of Smallwood Drive West when she began arguing with another woman who was at the event.
The argument continued to the parking lot, where Alexander got into her car and intentionally drove toward the woman and two other people, hitting the woman and another person, according to the Charles County Sheriff's Office.
After this, she pushed on the gas and drove directly into another parked car, which had someone sitting inside it, CCSO noted. However, the passenger was not injured.
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Alexander then circled the parking lot and rammed into the woman's car, according to authorities. Several people tried to stop her and eventually halted her car by slashing its tires.
Responders took one person to the hospital with non-life-threatening injuries while medics treated two other people at the scene.
Officers arrested Alexander and took her to the hospital for treatment. The next day, on June 2, a judge released her from the Charles County Detention Center on electronic monitoring.
The investigation is ongoing.
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CNN
22 minutes ago
- CNN
A tumultuous week in Los Angeles illustrates the human toll of the Trump administration's more aggressive immigration crackdown
Immigration Donald Trump Federal agenciesFacebookTweetLink Follow Days before immigration raids sparked sometimes violent protests and the deployment of US troops in Los Angeles, Nancy Raquel Chirinos Medina said, her husband received a 'strange' text. The message from US Immigration and Customs Enforcement directed the father of two with one on the way to come to a federal building downtown with his family. 'It really surprised us, especially because it said the whole family had to be there … It was strange,' recalled Chirinos Medina, an asylum seeker from Honduras along with her husband. They routinely checked in with ICE, she said, but their next appointment wasn't until September. Chirinos Medina, who's nine weeks pregnant, as well as her husband, their 8-year-old son, and their US-born toddler, wound up among the nearly 20 immigrant families detained by ICE for hours at that Los Angeles federal building the first Wednesday in June, she said. There were few answers about what was happening and, that night, her husband was arrested and later transferred to an ICE detention center to face deportation. 'Dad isn't coming back, is he?' their young son asked Chirinos Medina late that night. He cried the entire 90-minute drive back home to Lancaster, a city in northern Los Angeles County. 'We entered as a family of four and only three of us left,' said Chirinos Medina, who – with her husband and son – came to the US four years ago. They're in the process of appealing an immigration court decision denying their asylum claim. Her husband, Randal Isaias Bonilla Mejia, has not returned home. A court order bars his deportation until the family's asylum claim is adjudicated. 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Yahoo
an hour ago
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