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Jail suicide investigated

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Ana Romero's brother-in-law in Shelbyville said she used to sing all the time.

"She was a good singer, like Barbra Streisand," said Mario Aguilar, co-owner of Marimba's Mexican Restaurant on Midland Trail off U.S. 60 in Shelbyville.

"She was always happy."

Romero came to Kentucky three years ago from San Salvador, the capital of El Salvador, "to live the American dream, like every Latino who comes here," Aguilar said.

"She wanted to work hard to do better, to make a better future for her kids and to send money to help her mother," who is 92 and does not know about the death of her daughter.

Romero, 44, being held at the Franklin County Regional Jail on an immigration charge, was pronounced dead Thursday, just before midnight, at the Frankfort Regional Medical Center.

Franklin County Jailer Billy Roberts declined to release details of her death other than to say Tuesday it was being investigated by state police as a suspected suicide.

"I'm tore up about this," Roberts said. "My staff did everything they could to try to save her. It's just a very unfortunate circumstance and I feel for her family."

Roberts said 911 was called around 11:15 p.m. Thursday and Romero was taken by emergency medical personnel to the hospital.

Franklin County Coroner Will Harrod said an autopsy was performed at the state medical examiner's office in Frankfort. The preliminary autopsy isn't back yet, and the final report could take four to six weeks to receive, Harrod said.

The state police could not be reached for comment.

Shelbyville attorney Matthew Pippin said Tuesday he has been retained by Romero's family "to be the liaison." He said Romero was being held in the Franklin County Jail while waiting a deportation proceeding.

"It's certainly difficult for anybody to make a statement at this point because we are waiting for autopsy results," Pippin said. "We expect preliminary findings to be sent out by the end of the week."

Pippin said Romero's family "is very concerned about the circumstances surrounding her death. We certainly will be watching the investigation very closely.

"While Ms. Romero was incarcerated, that certainly in no way means she was not very, very well loved by her community of family and friends. At this point the grieving is tremendous and I think the sadness of the situation is overwhelming."

In San Salvador, "Ms. Romero had a home to return to," Pippin said. "She had family and a community of friends there as well, so she wasn't going to be dropped off in the middle of a foreign city."

Pippin said he has requested all court documents but doesn't know what charge Romero was originally being held on.

Pippin said he knows Mario Aguilar through the restaurant.

"He's a well-respected, well-known member of the community," Pippin said. "I've known him for quite some time. (Romero) was around the restaurant a lot and I had spoken with her but I did not know her very well. The family is very close.

"They're good people - the kind of people you want as neighbors and friends."

The news of Romero's death was "extremely shocking," said Mario Aguilar, while sitting at a restaurant table with his wife and Romero's sister, Blanca Aguilar, Tuesday afternoon.

The Aguilars talked with a State Journal reporter through the help of an interpreter, Anthony Veras, pastor of Upper Room Assemblies of God Church and a friend of the family.

The Aguilars said Romero has two sons in El Salvador, 28 and 26 years old.

"They work and go to school," said Mario Aguilar. "One works in a pharmacy and one works for a printing company."

Her father is dead, Mario Aguilar said.

In Shelbyville, Romero had been "helping a lady to clean houses," Mario Aguilar said.

He said she was arrested in January and was held at the Shelby County Detention Center for four months before being transferred to the Franklin County Jail.

"She was hoping for immigration reform where she could legally stay here and work," Mario Aguilar said.




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   Next 10 Comments of 19 Total Comments
19.
    Posted by KYgirlnTX September 3, 2008
newshound - where does it state that Hilario Bautista was an illegal immigrant, is that just an assumption on your part? I would venture to say that it was dismissed because the proper documents were produced.

This whole situation saddens me, my prayers go out to the family of Ms Romero.

Hilario O. Bautista, 22, no/expired other state registration receipt or plates, failure of owner to maintain required insurance/security, no operator's license, improper registration plate, possession open alcoholic beverage container in vehicle, dismissed.

18.
    Posted by newshound September 3, 2008
This is an updated article from the Lexington Herald Leader on Ms. Romero.

Officials silent on jail death
Published by Delano Masseyon September 3, 2008in Uncategorized.
Tags: Ana Romero, Aug. 21, Billy Roberts, death, El Salvador, Frankfort Regional Medical Center, Franklin County Coroner, Franklin County jail, Mario Aguilar, Matthew Pippin.

By Valarie Honeycutt Spears and Steve Lannen

vhoneycutt@herald-leader.com

Officials won't say what happened at the Franklin County jail last month to cause the death of Ana Romero, a Salvadoran immigrant awaiting deportation.

Family members say that, shortly before her death Aug. 21, Romero was placed in isolation for refusing to eat. Mario Aguilar said Romero, his sister-in-law, had telephoned several times from the jail saying her stomach hurt and she was vomiting.

Matthew Pippin, a Louisville attorney representing the family of the 44-year-old woman, said an autopsy was performed more than 10 days ago, but a preliminary report has not been released.

"We are befuddled about not having preliminary autopsy results," said Pippin, who added that he is "certainly concerned about the circumstances surrounding her death."

The silence mirrors dozens of cases nationwide in which little information is released about deaths in jails and prisons among those awaiting deportation. Congress has recently demanded that more information be made public.

The New York Times recently reported that at least 71 people set for deportation died in custody from 2004 to May 2008. Advocates are now calling for improved health care and suicide prevention measures for the detainees.

Although the deaths of immigrants in custody has become a national issue, the topic hasn't received much attention in Kentucky, said the Rev. Patrick Delahanty, interim director of the Catholic Conference of Kentucky.

"It's probably something we should watch," Delahanty said. "I hope someone does take an interest in it and begins to take a look at it."

Romero, who worked in Shelbyville cleaning houses to support her elderly mother and her two sons who were attending college in El Salvador, had not been charged with any crimes other than those related to being an illegal immigrant, Pippin said.

On Oct. 13, 2005, immigration officials ordered Romero to leave the country within 90 days, according to federal court records.. She did not.

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

As a result of the January charges, she 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 that U.S. District Judge Danny C. Reeves signed Aug. 7. She was required to pay a $100 fine, but did not receive additional jail time.

Pippin said Franklin County Coroner Will Harrod told him that Romero was found Aug. 21 with a sheet around her neck.

Harrod did not return telephone calls Tuesday.

Pippin said he thinks officials are investigating the death as a suicide.

Franklin Chief Deputy Coroner Marchele Otten said Monday an autopsy was performed after the death, but her office had not received information from the state medical examiner's office about a preliminary cause of death for Romero.

Franklin County Jailer Billy Roberts did not return several telephone calls Tuesday. But the The State Journal reported in an article last week that 911 was called around 11:15 p.m. Aug. 21 and Romero was taken by emergency medical personnel to the Frankfort Regional Medical Center, where she was pronounced dead just before midnight. Roberts told the paper that his staff tried to save Romero.

Aguilar, co-owner of Marimba's Mexican restaurant in Shelbyville, said that on Aug. 18 Romero called him complaining of stomach pain and vomiting. A female jail employee got on the phone and asked Aguilar to encourage his sister-in-law to eat.

But Aguilar said Romero told him that the food smelled bad and there was something wrong with it.

He said she called back again on Aug. 19 and said she was still sick. Aguilar said Romero told him she was placed in a dark isolation room on Aug. 20 for not eating.

"She had lost 30 to 35 pounds in the Franklin County jail because she did not want to eat the food," Aguilar said.

Pippin said Romero showed no signs of depression or being suicidal in the days leading up to her death.

She had family who loved her here and at home in El Salvador, he said.

Pippin said that Romero's family thinks her religious convictions would have prevented her from committing suicide.

"She was a devout Catholic," he said.

Pippin said a state police detective refused to talk to him about the case. State police officials could not immediately be reached for comment.

Romero's son, Asdrubal Velasquez of El Salvador, said in an e-mail to the Herald-Leader that his mother's death, "was somewhat shocking for me and my brother."

"We miss her," Velasquez said, adding that it was "unfair" for the government not to give him and his brother information about their mother's death.

No officials have talked to Romero's family who saw her in the days leading up to her death, Pippin said.

17.
    Posted by keastman September 2, 2008
YES, we do need a NEW JAILER...this one has been know to take deputy's into the field to beat up husbands of co-workers because the co-worker told him she was battered. He never should have been elected into that position. If I'd had my way he wouldn't have. However, the man that he and his thugs beat up didn't want to cause any trouble.

16.
    Posted by doesitreallymattereddie? August 29, 2008
Condolences Asdrubal...

My guess is Asdrubal that you will hear nothing from ANY person with authority. They will not notify you. They are possibly scared of a lawsuit by you and her family. In this country, even people that are here illegally have rights, it is written in our constitution (founding papers of US).

Is it LEGAL for an ILLEGAL person to sue?

---
Might be time shame.

15.
    Posted by WhaTaShame August 29, 2008
Do we need a new Jailer? Please post your comments

14.
    Posted by Asdrubal Velasquez August 28, 2008
Hello readers!
let me introduce myself: I'm Asdrubal Velasquez and have read this press release which I have been most impressed me, I am the son of Ana Romero and I am communicating from El Salvador, I knew my mother's death last Friday and was somewhat shocking for me and my brother, we miss her, and it is unfair that either were not informed us anything about it from the government, the truth that is very bad that we are not in any response after a week of events, we hope that we help as soon as possible...

Please, for any notice about that, send a mail to asdrubal2709@gmail.com Help to us! we don't kow how is her! and dont know what we can do!

13.
    Posted by GrammarGal August 28, 2008
3D--What ever happened to Empathy? It's sad when anyone feels the need to end their own life for ANY reason. All of us make the wrong choices some time in our lives. Death should not be the end result, even if it's at our own hands. Some people have had all they can take and if there's no one there to give them the encouragement they need at that exact moment, who knows what they might do. There are many others who, if not for caring friends and strong faith, would have taken the same way out.

12.
    Posted by WHAT???? August 28, 2008
Do you know the person personally? Maybe it was dismissed because they did proceed with the deportation and there was no need to go any further with these charges.

11.
    Posted by newshound August 28, 2008
newtofrankfort, I misspoke, it was the District Court Report for August 12th, not the police report, copy attached.

Hilario O. Bautista, 22, no/expired other state registration receipt or plates, failure of owner to maintain required insurance/security, no operator's license, improper registration plate, possession open alcoholic beverage container in vehicle, dismissed.

10.
    Posted by pinpointers August 28, 2008
Being put in jail is a very traumatic experience, especialy for a foreign lady trying to work her way into her american dream. doing the work I do, I run into legal people that are completely useles in this society on a daily basis....it's sad to see that people who actually WANT to work become so desparate over the fact they are about to be deported back to a life of poverty and misery that they so this as the only solution.

sad sad sad...I feel for her family and friends.

   Next 10 Comments

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